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Working Mothers

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Pablo Say - Old Child



After returning to Chile, Neruda was given diplomatic posts in Buenos Aires and then Barcelona, Spain.[30] He later succeeded Gabriela Mistral as consul in Madrid, where he became the center of a lively literary circle, befriending such writers as Rafael Alberti, Federico García Lorca, and the Peruvian poet César Vallejo.[30] His only offspring, his daughter Malva Marina (Trinidad) Reyes, was born in Madrid in 1934, the product of his first marriage to María Antonia Hagenaar. The child was plagued with severe health problems, in particular suffering from hydrocephalus.[31] She died in 1943 (nine years old), having spent most of her short life with a foster family in the Netherlands after Neruda ignored and abandoned her, forcing her mother to work to solely support her care.[32][33][34][35] Half that time was during the Nazi occupation of Holland, when the Nazi mentality on birth defects denoted genetic inferiority at best. During this period, Neruda became estranged from his wife and instead began a relationship with Delia del Carril [es], an aristocratic Argentine artist who was 20 years his senior.




Pablo Say - Old Child



Neruda's marriage to Vogelzang broke down and he eventually obtained a divorce in Mexico in 1943. His estranged wife moved to Monte Carlo to escape the hostilities in Spain and then to the Netherlands with their very ill only child, and he never saw either of them again.[37] After leaving his wife, Neruda lived with Delia del Carril in France, eventually marrying her (shortly after his divorce) in Tetecala in 1943; however, his new marriage was not recognized by Chilean authorities as his divorce from Vogelzang was deemed illegal.[38]


The children, whom authorities placed in the care of Contra Costa Children and Family Services, told police they were watched constantly from the time they arrived at the house in the 2500 block of 22nd Street. While allowed to sleep on the living-room floor at night, they spent their days standing in the backyard.


Authorities still are investigating a claim that the children were fed only once a week, he added. They were never enrolled in school, though Fiu apparently did keep paperwork showing her to be the legal guardian.


Castillo said she saw no signs of abuse in the house. She says the children were allowed in the house but preferred to play outside most of the time. They often played rough with each other, accounting for their injuries, she said, and the family often took them on trips to the beach and chores around town.


On the morning of March 26, a woman who works in the area said she came across the children at a liquor store at San Pablo and Lovegrove avenues. They were without shoes and were buying a box of cookies with money an elderly lady gave them.


Diaz called San Pablo police the afternoon of March 26 and reported that the victims had run away from home. Detectives invited her to the department to speak to a detective. She denied the allegations when confronted, Pamplona said, and she brought photos of the children from shortly after they arrived in the United States, when they looked much more healthy.


There have been several theories about what initially sparked the bloody conflict between Pablo Escobar's Medellin Cartel and the Cali Cartel. According to Juan Pablo, the war was started by Pablo Escobar's friend Jorge "El Negro" Pabon, who returned to Colombia from a stint in a US prison only to find that his girlfriend had cheated on him with a man who worked for the Cali Cartel. Pablo Escobar agreed to call Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela -- one of the Cali Cartel leaders -- and ask him to send the man to Medellin so Pabon could get his revenge, but Rodriguez Orejuela refused. Escobar allegedly ended the conversation by saying "whoever is not with me is against me" and a few months later the Cali Cartel set off a car bomb in the building where Pablo Escobar's wife and children were sleeping.


Twenty-five years after his death, I have begun to review the memories of the people who suffered the horrors of the drug-trafficking war. I now feel immense sadness and shame for the enormous pain my husband caused, even as I mourn the agonising consequences his actions have had for my children and me.


When Picasso started seeing Dora Maar in 1935, Marie Thérèse and Maya moved to Versailles but Picasso continued to visit them on the weekends. Maya continued to have a relationship with his dad even when he had children with his next lover, François Gilot. She used to visit them in Antibes and even taught Picasso how to swim.


The process to adopt a child from foster care includes training, interviews and home visits to determine if adoption is right for you. These steps will help match you with a child or sibling group that your family will fit well with.


To learn more about adoption from foster care, call the Massachusetts Adoption Resource Exchange at 617-964-6273 or go to mareinc.org. Start the process today and give a waiting child a permanent place to call home.


Deceased Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar Gaviria plays with his son Sebastian Marroquin in this undated family photo taken in Medellin. Sebastian Marroquin, who changed his name from Juan Pablo Escobar after his father was killed by police in 1993, is the central character in the Nicolas Entel's Los Pecados de mi Padre (The Sins of my Father), a documentary about his childhood and growing up with Colombia's most famous drug lord. REUTERS/Courtesy Sebastian Marroquin/Handout


Laje P, Rhodes K, Magee L, Klarich MK. Thoracoscopic bilateral T3 sympathectomy for primary focal hyperhidrosis in children. J Pediatr Surg. 2017 Feb;52(2):313-316. doi: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2016.11.030. Epub 2016 Nov 14.


Laje P, Bhatti TR, Adzick NS: Solid pseudopapillary neoplasm of the pancreas in children: A 15 year experience and identification of a unique immunohistochemical marker. J Pediatr Surg 48:2054-2060, 2013.


After complications in labour, Picasso (who was extremely small for a child) was believed to be stillborn and left on a side table while medical staff tended to his mother. It was only when his uncle, who was a doctor, blew cigar smoke and he began crying that they realised the mistake and his uncle saved his life.


Among all of his interesting facts it's no secret that Picasso has had a string of romantic entanglements with a number of women throughout his life, with four children fathered by three different women.


cries of children cries of women cries of birds cries of flowers cries of timbers and of stones cries of bricks cries of furniture of beds and chairs of curtains of pots of cats and of papers cries of odors which claw at one another cries of smoke pricking the shoulder of the cries which strew in the cauldron and of the rain of birds which inundates the sea which gnaws the bone and breaks its teeth biting the cotton wool which the sun mops up from the plate which the purse and the pocket hide in the print which the foot leaves in the rock


Pablo had only half believed it yesterday when it flashed through his mind that there was a person living at the bag but there the guy is, acting like it's the most normal thing in the world, kicking back on the couch in his living room. He has found that such stray images are usually more accurate than his regular thoughts, a different way of receiving truth and that he should study them just like he studies the photos he snaps with the camera, a treasure and burden in one, hanging now from his neck. Pablo never reveals his stray images to anyone. Instead he shows some people his photos and watches their reactions, curious to see if anyone will catch a whiff of the atmosphere of his inner world. This is all he can do. That the stray images must remain hidden, that no one must know, has been a given in his life since the age of twelve when he could no longer be considered a child, when Little Grandmother paid to have a wall knocked down and a room taken over from the apartment next door so they didn't have to share a bed anymore. Before that he told her everything.


Also increasingly common, doctors say, are children suffering panic attacks, heart palpitations and other symptoms of mental anguish, as well as chronic addictions to mobile devices and computer screens that have become their sitters, teachers and entertainers during lockdowns, curfews and school closures.


Dr. David Greenhorn said the emergency department at the Bradford Royal Infirmary where he works in northern England used to treat one or two children per week for mental health emergencies, including suicide attempts. The average now is closer to one or two per day, sometimes involving children as young as 8, he said.


At Robert Debré, the psychiatric unit typically used to see about 20 attempted suicide cases per month involving children aged 15 and under. Not only has that number now doubled in some months since September, but some children also seem ever-more determined to end their lives, Delorme said.


Mithi was brought to the United States from the Philippines when she was five years old and grew up in California. She has a degree in psychology from UCLA and volunteers as a research assistant in a lab that studies infants at high risk of developing autism. She also volunteered as a crisis counselor for UCLA Peer Helpline, advising students who were victims of rape, child abuse, and substance abuse. Mithi also volunteered as a mentor and tutor for at-risk middle-school children in Los Angeles. 041b061a72


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