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So he lives and remains under the midwife's protective care.
Underwood later spent two months in protective care and was diagnosed with bipolar disorder.
Although not a mother herself, Addams became the "mother to the nation," identified with motherhood in the sense of protective care of her people.
It collected severely underweight female pups, placed them in protective care and fed them.
A moth on which evolution has lavished a remarkable degree of protective care is Oxytenis modestia.
Mutt also has a Goshala (cow shed) where a cow and calf are under protective care.
Up until now they have felt relatively safe, living under the protective care of Maggie Wych and her scruffy dog Nash.
They attended the families of the dead to meditation chambers, and took the children of the one crew member whose body had not returned into their protective care.
Taken from a short story by Kurt Vonnegut Jr., this film "is a small, touching piece, adapted with protective care," John J. O'Connor said.
The child seeks protection from the Divine and begs forgiveness for all the deeds of evil that it shall commit once it is out of the mother's protective care.
The measure, which was adopted after the death of 6-year-old Elisa Izquierdo in Manhattan, removes rules limiting the ability of prosecutors, other officials and reporters to gain access to records involving children under the government's protective care.
They point to rising rates of repeated abuse in the homes - a red flag in child welfare work - as a sign that the city could and should be doing better at providing help or removing children to protective care.
As a child growing up in Norway he was subjected to corporal punishment by his Pakistani parents and as a result contacted child protective services on his own, who took him into protective care for six months.
There is something admirable about compassion, but Bowden has also used his Hee Haw charms and forgiving ways as a recruiting tool at Florida State, able to woo blue-chip talent into the program's protective care.
She isn't talking about her right big toe, but is making the connection between its having been broken and her now finding herself in his protective care more than a thousand miles from Pompano Beach, Florida, where she almost died.
She felt the influences of that friendly place at once; but for a time she wondered at the natural way in which kind things were done, the protective care extended over her, and the confiding air with which these people treated her.
Some of the youngest were buried adorned with strings of beads or other jewelry, and had their winding cloths fastened with rows of brass pins, suggesting the loving and protective care of the adults who mourned them.
Shot in color and in black and white, the lyrically ragged, casually moving results present a man who often seems defined less by his presence than by his absence, at times literally, as when Julius wanders away from his brother's protective care.
Also, increased turbidity due to stormwater runoff in streams can be detrimental to egg clusters buried in the gravel streambed, often causing eggs to become detached and free flowing, downstream and out of the protective care of the male.
Anchoring herself in the comforting routine of her secretarial work for a publishing house and in her home life under the fiercely protective care of her aunt enabled Smith to write poetry and novels whose primary subject was her obsession with death.
The Washington Post's second prize was for investigative reporting by the reporters Sari Horowitz, Scott Higham and Sarah Cohen on the District of Columbia's "role in the neglect and death of 229 children placed in protective care between 1993 and 2000."
FINALISTS The Washington Post for a series exposing the District of Columbia's role in the deaths of 229 children placed in protective care between 1993 and 2000; The Washington Post, coverage of Sept. 11 and its aftermath.
Teacher Sees Scars and Bruises Terence was placed in protective care Dec. 11 by the city's Office of Special Services for Children after a teacher at his elementary school, Public School 178 in Jamaica, Queens, noticed that he had scars, bruises and other injuries.
Officials of the agency, which is part of the Human Resources Administration, said yesterday that they could not provide statistics on safety of children placed in protective care in New York City and could not assess whether three incidents of violence involving the same child indicated a wider pattern of abuse.