Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Since Bob and Viv's remarriage in 2006 they had both wanted a child together. However, plans changed when Bob's daughter Dawn Woods (Julia Mallam) died in a show home explosion in July 2006. On the day of Dawn's funeral, Viv collapses and was found by her daughter Donna Windsor (Verity Rushworth). At the hospital, doctors revealed that Viv was ...
[5] Fourth Genre, a journal dedicated to "notable, innovative work in non-fiction," described the book in a column about how different writers have approached grief: "McCracken frankly illuminates what that situation really implies: the sad and gruesome facts concerning giving birth to a dead baby. You carry it for the full nine months, you ...
Duncan admitted in court to having been married 10 times. She had been arrested for operating a brothel in San Francisco, and passing bad checks. She had made her son, Frank, the center of her life. She also had a daughter, Patricia, who died at age 15. Under oath, Duncan admitted that she had four children in total, but loved Frank the most. [6]
Barbara and Patricia Grimes were sisters who disappeared from the Brighton Park, Chicago, Illinois area on December 28, 1956, while returning home from a movie. Their bodies were found on January 22, 1957, down an embankment off a roadway. [28] Murdered 25 days Patricia Grimes: 12 [29] United States of America 25 days 1957 Willie Edwards: 24
Patricia Stallings (born 1964 or 1965) is an American woman who was wrongfully convicted of murder after the death of her son Ryan on September 7, 1989. Because testing seemed to indicate an elevated level of ethylene glycol in Ryan's blood, authorities suspected antifreeze poisoning , and arrested Stallings the next day.
[2] [6] Her novels Journey (1991) and Baby (1993) were also adapted for TV in 1995 and 2000, respectively. [2] [7] [8] MacLachlan ultimately authored over 60 children's books throughout her career. [2] [3] She collaborated with her daughter, Emily MacLachlan Charest, to create several picture books during the latter part of her career. [9]
Mary Elizabeth McCracken (February 2, 1911 – October 19, 1945) [1] was the first woman to overcome infantile paralysis to become a medical missionary. [1] She was the third of eight children [1] and the daughter of the medical missionaries Josiah Calvin McCracken [2] and Helen Newpher McCracken, [3] also known as the "McCrackens of Shanghai".
Children were found with bruises on their arms, appearing frail, and caked with dirt. [20] The children were so malnourished that deputies thought they were all under 18 years old, when in fact seven were over 18. [26] The house contained hundreds of journals written by the children about their lives. [27]