Mar. 16, 2025
Photo: Alejandro Jaime Gómez Sánchez/Facebook
“What seemed macabre to me is that this person mentioned 10 cases in which he gives details, the names of the victims; he gave us the clothing they had on at the time,” Gómez told the radio outlet. “He seemed happy about what he had done.”
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Mar. 16, 2025
Photo: Love Multiplied Facebook
More than 20 years after a couple made the decision to donate their remaining embryos after welcoming twins through in vitro fertilization (IVF), Brooke and Chris Martin were reunited with the children they became thanks to a 23andMe DNA test kit.
The Martins welcomed their twin boys in October 2000 after years of infertility,Today Parentsreported. At the time, the couple knew they were done having children but as the boys were conceived with the help of IVF, they then had to decide what to do with embryos they hadn’t used.
Mar. 16, 2025
Billy and Peggy Griffin.Photo:The Templeton of Cary
The Templeton of Cary
Peggy Griffin, 88, still remembers the very first time she saw her husband. She was just 10 years old and on the playground of the North Carolina orphanage where she grew up.
“I remember that day very well. I thought he was the cutest thing I had ever seen,” she tells PEOPLE.
It was Sept. 2, 1946 and Billy Griffin, 89, had just arrived at what was then called the Methodist Orphanage.
Mar. 16, 2025
Photo: Newzee
The piece was set up with paint cans and brushes scattered around it, which reportedly led to the couple — who have not been identified — to assume that it was a participatory work.
That was not the case, and now the couple may be liable to help with some of the restoration costs, theNew York Timesreported.
TheTimesreported that staff at the exhibition noticed the piece had been vandalized on March 28 when they identified three brush strokes on the painting that had not been there before.
Mar. 16, 2025
Think you’re Reese’s biggest fan? Think again.
When Renee Cupp becamepregnantwith her daughter, she toyed around with a few names. For a while, Lily was the front runner, until she and her husband had the idea to name their second child after their favoritechocolate and peanut butter candy. So, eight years ago, the couple printed the name Reese Eve Cupp on their daughter’s birth certificate.
Although the correct pronunciation of the candy is “Rees-IS,” Cupp tells PEOPLE that she has always pronounced it “Rees-EES,” which is a common inflection of the popularchocolate brand, thus the addition of her daugter’s middle initial.