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    "result": {"data":{"allStrapiArticle":{"edges":[{"node":{"id":"a2937708-08df-5268-b1a6-440d13b79634","slug":"815-08-23-Robin-Ledbetter","name":"Robin Ledbetter","content":{"data":{"content":"Robin Lee Ledbetter, 35, of Wendell, NC, went to meet her Lord unexpectedly on August 14, 2023.She was born August 11, 1988 to Ricky Ledbetter and Linda Krebs in Johnston County, NC.\n\nRobin was preceded in death by her father, Ricky Lee Ledbetter. Robin is survived by her mother, Linda Krebs Kiker, and sisters Jennifer Odom and husband Michael of Erwin, NC, Jessica Ramirez of Dunn, NC, and Crystal Ledbetter of Wendell, NC. Robin is also survived by her children, Jeorgia Leigh Odom, Rhyne Dean Bobbitt, Raven Lee Melvin and nephews Mason, Ashton, Linkin, Alex, SJ and Fenix.\n\nFuneral services will be held at 12 p.m. Saturday, August 26, 2023, at Lee’s Grove PFWB Church, in Dunn, NC by the Rev. Randy Beasley.\n\nRobin will truly be missed and loved by everyone who knew her."}},"city":"Wendell","county":"Wake","state":"North Carolina","deathdate":"08/14/2023","age":35,"user_updated":true,"image":{"localFile":{"publicURL":"/static/60d2ad322e5a78dac7948ba46e76e60d/Robin_Ledbetter_241c9021fc.JPG"}}}},{"node":{"id":"e97b8cea-5b83-535c-9181-3550ed729f84","slug":"article-161","name":"Margaret Mary Perkett","content":{"data":{"content":""}},"city":"Hillsborough","county":"Orange","state":"North Carolina","deathdate":"08/13/2023","age":98,"user_updated":false,"image":null}},{"node":{"id":"509cea4f-8f1e-57a3-b7f7-f3079692804b","slug":"article-162","name":"Thomas Andrew Reynolds, Jr.","content":{"data":{"content":""}},"city":"Garner","county":"Wake","state":"North Carolina","deathdate":"08/13/2023","age":68,"user_updated":false,"image":null}},{"node":{"id":"a0143e8d-739d-5a95-81e5-ecfa54ee9c25","slug":"article-163","name":"Billy Joe Jones","content":{"data":{"content":""}},"city":"Cameron","county":"Harnett","state":"North Carolina","deathdate":"08/13/2023","age":53,"user_updated":false,"image":null}},{"node":{"id":"c3db3f64-9269-5e06-a8e3-ae7e76f81d5a","slug":"article-164","name":"Dorothy Reddell Caldwell","content":{"data":{"content":"Dorothy Reddell Caldwell, a trailblazing advocate for childhood nutrition who had roots in Arkansas and blooms in Washington, D.C., North Carolina, and across the nation, passed away peacefully at her home in Raleigh, N.C., on Sunday, August 13, 2023. She was 87. \n\nDorothy– also known as Dot, Sis, Mom, and Mimi – was born Dec. 2, 1935, at her family’s home near Cotton Plant, Ark., to T.J. and Letha Reddell. She married Marvin Caldwell in 1957, and together they had five children who produced 15 grandchildren and 16 great grandchildren.\n\nIt’s impossible to fully describe the impact of the 50-plus years Dorothy spent creating and promoting standards, policies and programs that ensured children of all backgrounds had access to healthy meals in their schools. But her legacy extends far beyond her professional career as a registered dietician, writer, and educator. She also was a newspaper publisher and a leader in her church and community. \n\nMost of all, she will be fondly remembered as the inspirational matriarch of a family that will tell stories of her benevolence for generations and how, in every aspect of her life, she actively lived out her faith in Jesus Christ.\n\nDorothy’s long list of personal and professional accomplishments would have been hard to predict when a doctor from Cotton Plant walked several miles to assist with her delivery at her parent’s small home in the hardscrabble, lowland farm country of Woodruff County, Arkansas. \n\nIt quickly became apparent, however, that she would spend her life affirming the cliché that big things come in small packages. She grew to no more than five feet in height, but displayed an early thirst for learning, was blessed with self-confidence, and developed the ability to take charge and get things done. \n\nShe and her siblings grew up in a two-bedroom home that had no electricity until she was in high school and no indoor plumbing until she left to become the first person in her family to attend college. \n\nWhile the family lacked material possessions, it provided a warm and loving environment where Dorothy learned the value of hard work, the foundations of her strong faith in God, and the importance of helping others in need. Her entire life was marked by her willingness – insistence, some might say – to help those around her whether they asked or not!\n\nAt an early age, Dorothy became a voracious reader, checking out books from a bookmobile that would pass by the family farm, while also learning how to make her own clothes and turn homegrown ingredients into a meal fit for royalty. Her homemade rolls, brunch egg casserole, eggplant dip, shrimp Alice, brandied cranberries, cornbread dressing, and hot apple cider served to grandkids from her silver coffee urn were among many family favorites.\n\nDorothy was active in the 4-H club in school, and the extension agent and her teachers took note of and encouraged her academic potential. She graduated with honors from Cotton Plant High School in 1952 when she was only 16 and, with the help of a Sears Scholarship, personal savings, and community support, enrolled at the University of Arkansas, which, as her father noted, was a “fur piece” from Cotton Plant. \n\nShe excelled at the UA, earning three more scholarships and a degree in home economics. She also was a member of Mortarboard, president of the Four-H House, and vice president and chaplain of Phi Upsilon Omicron (the home economics sorority). As a senior, she was president of the Arkansas Future Teachers of America and travelled all over the state, as well as to San Francisco and Chicago in that role.\n\nAfter graduating in 1956, Dorothy was recruited to Marianna, Ark., to teach home economics at Futrell High School. There she met Marvin, the owner, editor, and publisher of The Courier-Index newspaper. Not long after they married in 1957, Dorothy began working part-time as a columnist and features writer for the newspaper while they started a family.\n\nIn 1968, unhappy with the quality of the school lunch programs, Dorothy returned to the public school system as Director of Food and Nutrition for the Lee County School District, a role she held for 20 years. During that time she earned a Master’s degree in food systems administration from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. When Marvin died in 1983, she spent two years as publisher of The Courier-Index. And in 1987 she became the first female president of the Lee County Chamber of Commerce.\n\nDorothy was Director of Child Nutrition for the Arkansas Department of Education from 1988-97 before relocating from Little Rock to Washington, D.C., for a four-year career in with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Then she moved to Raleigh, N.C., where she worked for the Department of Health and Human Services and as an adjunct assistant professor for the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.\n\nThroughout her career, Dorothy was active on state and national levels with professional organizations that helped shape child nutrition policy and action in America. She was president and later a board member of what’s now known as the School Nutrition Association (SNA) and the School Nutrition Foundation (SNF). \n\nShe also was on the board for the Arkansans in Coalition Against Hunger and the North Carolina Public Health Foundation, chair of the Arkansas Dietetic Association, a member of the Society of Nutrition Education and Behavior, and president of the Arkansas School Nutrition Association. And she frequently wrote articles and contributed to several books on topics related to child nutrition.\n\nAmong the many causes she championed were efforts to standardize lunch times, create programs that provided students with breakfast, remove vending machines from schools, train local leaders on ways to develop healthy meals that kids would eat, and educate students about their nutrition.\n\nAs president of the 65,000-member SNA from 1993-94, she led the development of the Nutrition Integrity Standards and Keys to Excellence benchmarks. And as president of the SNF she co-chaired a campaign that raised $3 million for an endowment to support the foundation’s education and public relations efforts. \n\nIn celebrating its 50-year anniversary, the SNF recognized Dorothy as a “School Nutrition Hero.” In summing up her contributions it noted that she was “a recognized listener, speaker and writer. She has taught, she has mentored, she has advised, she has facilitated. She is a role model who has been, and continues to be, a School Nutrition Hero for many.”\n\nDorothy received numerous awards, including the Medallion Award from the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, the 21st Century Families Award for Enhancing the Quality of Life for Youth and Families from the Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service, the Glaxo Smith Kline Child Health Recognition Award, the Good for Kids Award from the North Carolina Pediatric Society, and the SNA’s Gertrude Applebaum Lifetime Achievement Award.\n\nShe was equally active in her church and community, regardless of which community she called home. She was a lifetime member of the Marianna Junior Auxiliary, active in PEO for 65 years, and a Sunday School teacher, chairman of the Council of Ministries, and a board member for the First United Methodist Church of Marianna. \n\nIn Raleigh, Dorothy was a member of Hayes Barton United Methodist Church. She was a trained Stephen Minister, providing one-to-one care to people who were experiencing a difficult time in life. An avid gardener, she also grew pounds of basil on her deck to distribute to local food banks.\n\nWhile she enjoyed her work and community service activities, her greatest passion was creating experiences with her family, including her siblings and many nieces and nephews. Thousands of photographs, some framed and others stored in volumes of books or on her computer, recorded the time she spent with loved ones. \n\nShe covered her refrigerator from top to bottom with such photos, along with a 2003 “Family Circus” comic strip that shows a grandmother sitting with her grandchildren. The caption sums up one of Dorothy’s core beliefs: “The best things in life are not things.” Her family members, she said, were her “best things.” \n\nDorothy spent countless hours investing in her “best things.” She introduced her grandchildren to classic musicals, taught them to cook, gently (mostly) corrected their table manners, and took them on cultural adventures to museums and plays. All of her 15 grandchildren toured New York City courtesy of their Mimi, many seeing their first Broadway play. And when they graduated from high school or college, she was always there to celebrate – and to spring for dinner.\n\nDorothy also hosted regular summer trips to North Carolina’s Outer Banks, where 30-plus family members could spend a week eating, reading, eating, body surfing, eating, playing games, and, well, eating.\n\nDorothy was preceded in death by her parents, Thaddys Jefferson Reddell (1903-1982) and Letha Cisco Reddell (1905-1993); her husband, Marvin Bounds Caldwell (1926-1983); her brothers, Kenneth Howard Reddell (1925-1996) and Neal Donald Reddell (1930-1990); and two of her sisters, Patricia Ann Reddell Young (1942-2017) and Barbara Reddell (1939-1940). \n\nShe was survived by her five children, Catherine (and Bill) Eagles of Greensboro, N.C., Susan (and Rick) Farmer of Richmond, Va., Janet (and Mark) Gruchacz of Raleigh, N.C., Stephen (and Audrey) Caldwell of Fayetteville, Ark., and David (and Terrie) Caldwell of Morrilton, Ark.; by 15 grandchildren and 16 great grandchildren; by two of her sisters, Peggy Jean Reddell Curbo Rooks and Betty Jo Reddell Jones; and by many loving nieces, nephews, and their offspring. \n\nThe family would like to express our deepest gratitude to Rosa Murimi, Jacqueline Kimani, Hannah Kimani, Margaret Mwangi, Karen O’leary-Barber, Amy Hotchkin, Yazmine Taylor and the entire staff at Promedica Hospice. These individuals dedicated themselves to Dorothy’s care and well-being with professionalism and compassion. We will always be grateful for their support.\n\nMemorial services will be held at 2pm, Friday, August 18 at Hayes Barton United Methodist Church in Raleigh, N.C. Another service will be held at 11am on September 23 at First United Methodist Church in Marianna, Ark. In lieu of flowers, consider a donation to Hayes Barton UMC (In As Much Fund) or the NC Cottey College Scholarship Fund."}},"city":"Raleigh","county":"Wake","state":"North Carolina","deathdate":"08/13/2023","age":87,"user_updated":true,"image":{"localFile":{"publicURL":"/static/d47255a8fc54b85e0cdaeb0059c2a6ad/object_Object_9d38d6495c.jpeg"}}}},{"node":{"id":"43782f95-c1a8-5ced-809b-cf0dd93759fc","slug":"2023-08-13-Rose-Fowler","name":"Rose  Fowler","content":{"data":{"content":""}},"city":"Raleigh","county":"Wake County","state":"North Carolina","deathdate":"08/13/2023","age":70,"user_updated":false,"image":null}},{"node":{"id":"1d9f926b-fd02-5381-bf09-cda77af5a107","slug":"2023-08-12-Pamela-Gruber","name":"Pamela Gruber","content":{"data":{"content":""}},"city":"Fayetteville","county":"Cumberland County","state":"North Carolina","deathdate":"08/12/2023","age":73,"user_updated":false,"image":null}},{"node":{"id":"14c4766c-1fdc-58bd-ab7a-2d408ee46ffb","slug":"article-169","name":"Randolph Stuart Diuguid","content":{"data":{"content":"Randolph Stuart Diuguid “Randy” died on August 11, 2023, age 74 years.  Born in Wilmington, North Carolina, on November 19, 1948, the son of Blanche Heyser Diuguid and Frank S. Diuguid, Jr., he grew up in Raleigh,  was active in the Lutheran Church and in the Boy Scouts of America, achieved the rank of Eagle Scout, and graduated from Broughton High School in 1966.  Randy was an avid reader. Beginning in his youth, he had a keen interest in theology and, particularly, the teachings of Martin Luther. He retained an intellectual curiosity throughout his life. \n\nHe attended ECU for one year prior to enlisting in the US Army.  He trained as an aircraft mechanic and an air traffic controller before being selected for Army Flight School. In March 1969, he graduated as an officer and pilot, and was assigned to the 175th Assault Helicopter Company in Vinh Long, Vietnam, in the Mekong Delta. Randy flew over 1,082 flight hours in combat and was shot down by the North Vietnamese one mile from the Cambodian border in November 1969. After the war he served a year in Stuttgart, Germany, and returned home where he was decorated at Fort Bragg in May 1971 with the Bronze Star, the Air Medal for Heroism, and with the Army Commendation Medal for his war-time service and for the medical evacuation of wounded in Vietnam.\n\nRandy flew with the NC National Guard while continuing his education at NCSU. For the next forty years, he continued in aviation, flying helicopters, turbo-props, and jets all over the globe. He believed in and helped pioneer the LifeFlight concept and spent a significant part of his life saving lives through helicopter medical evacuation. He also flew the SKY 5 TV helicopter from 1982 to 1984. He aided in the development of safe TV helicopters and the use of microwave, reporting from the cockpit, and filming from the air, as well as beaming local news nationally via satellite. In 1984, only five helicopters in TV news nationwide had this capability--SKY 5 was one of these.\n\nSafety was his overriding concern, even at a time when the helicopter industry ran up the worst accident record in aviation history. His helicopter flying encompassed all uses of the helicopter. Trained as a test pilot, he spent five years as a pilot flying for offshore oil in the Gulf of Mexico; two years flying off a tuna fishing vessel in the South; fought forest fires in the West, and with the NC Forest Services in 1985; three years as a dedicated LifeFlight pilot; and two more years flying cardiac care LifeFlight—the highest level of helo-medical care. He was a Captain and Chief Test Pilot for the only helicopter airline in the world, Pan Am Helicopter Airways, flying over New York City. In 1986, he was the recipient of an Air Ambassador award for five consecutive life-saving LifeFlights in one day in Tampa, Florida. Overall, he logged over 8,800 flight hours without an accident.\n\nRandy is survived by three brothers, Frank “Scot” Diuguid, III, of Bracey, Virginia; William H. Diuguid and Bruce D. Diuguid, both of Raleigh, North Carolina; and preceded in death by his brother Douglas T. Diuguid.\n\nA graveside memorial service with full military honors will be held at Raleigh Memorial Park, Raleigh, North Carolina, on August 26, 2023, at 10:00 a.m. The attendance of veterans and other service members and the general public, in honor of this veteran’s service to our country, would be greatly appreciated."}},"city":"Raleigh","county":"Wake","state":"North Carolina","deathdate":"08/11/2023","age":74,"user_updated":true,"image":{"localFile":{"publicURL":"/static/1672cb32e48c8042ecfcb02be4002ceb/object_Object_38f6b17f32.jpeg"}}}},{"node":{"id":"a5f9aa56-f595-5d4e-bb26-79f29ab58399","slug":"article-160","name":"Maria Ayala","content":{"data":{"content":""}},"city":"Carrboro","county":"Orange","state":"North Carolina","deathdate":"08/11/2023","age":70,"user_updated":false,"image":null}},{"node":{"id":"ed2cb1ec-cd9c-58ad-aa62-a413a94252cc","slug":"812-08-23-Willodene-Sanders","name":"Willodene Holland Sanders","content":{"data":{"content":"Willodene H. Sanders passed away at the age of 89 on August 11, 2023.  She was a Retired Depty Sheriff at the Cumberland County Sheriff's Department.  She was greatly loved and will be forever missed by her family."}},"city":"Eastover","county":"Cumberland","state":"North Carolina","deathdate":"08/11/2023","age":89,"user_updated":true,"image":{"localFile":{"publicURL":"/static/12bdba0898e24cb99088fe240083effb/Willodene_adbe67894f.jpg"}}}},{"node":{"id":"08d6494e-3015-57a0-87b9-87b063ff789a","slug":"2023-08-11-Charles-Paterno","name":"Charles Paterno","content":{"data":{"content":""}},"city":"Fuquay Varina","county":"Harnett","state":"North Carolina","deathdate":"08/11/2023","age":85,"user_updated":false,"image":null}},{"node":{"id":"26c7528b-7b54-544f-9623-82884ea60e9a","slug":"2023-08-11-Rosemary-Prasek","name":"Rosemary Prasek","content":{"data":{"content":"It is with very heavy hearts that we announce the passing of our beloved wife, mother, daughter, sister, and friend, Rosemary Prasek on August 11, 2023, at her home in Raleigh, NC, where she was surrounded by loved ones.\n\nRose to those who knew her, was born in Chicago, IL on June 7, 1961 to Ignac and Marija Glavac. She will be so missed by her husband of 40 years, Dave Prasek, son Ryan (Rachel), and especially by her granddog, Teddy. She is predeceased by her father, Ignac Glavac. Rose is survived by mother Marija, siblings Mary Glavac, Joan Wroblewski (Roger), and John Glavac, and many nieces and nephews whom she adored.\n\nRose and Dave loved to travel, and were always thrilled to have Ryan and Rachel join them on a cruise. Back on land, Rose loved visiting Las Vegas, New Orleans, and Seattle. Rose and Dave lived in Illinois, Florida, and Seattle before settling near their son in Raleigh, NC.\n\nCancer may have shortened her life, but it could not dim Rose’s love of life. She never lost her smile or her concern for others and was ready to try any treatment that might give her more time to travel, spend time with her family, and spoil Teddy with treats. Her infectious smile, her generous spirit, and her compassion for others will be missed.\n\nIn lieu of flowers, donations can be made to: Metavivor Research and Support (EIN 37-1578088) 1783 Forest Drive #184, Annapolis, MD 21401\n\nA memorial service will be held at 11:00am on November 4, 2023, at the Slovenian Catholic Church. A luncheon will follow immediately after at the Slovenian Catholic Cultural Center (14252 Main Street, Lemont, IL) for her family and friends. \n\nhttps://www.caringbridge.org/visit/roseprasek "}},"city":"Raleigh","county":"Wake","state":"North Carolina","deathdate":"08/11/2023","age":62,"user_updated":true,"image":{"localFile":{"publicURL":"/static/debe74ab514b048dc98e2994b08c8f65/Rose_and_Teddy_Cropped_812703fe4e.jpg"}}}}]}},"pageContext":{"limit":12,"skip":2280,"numPages":317,"currentPage":191,"numObits":3797,"featured":false}},
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