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Mississippi cold case has roots in Joplin MO

JACKSON COUNTY, Miss. Investigators in Mississippi continue their work on a cold case that got its start in southwest Missouri. It was 40 years ago when witnesses say they saw a visibly distressed woman walking barefoot along a highway in Jackson County, Mississippi. It was December 3, 1982, so it was cold out and […]

New podcast Solvable looks at how Mississippi Baby Jane Doe was identified as Alisha Heinrich

New podcast Solvable looks at how Mississippi Baby Jane Doe was identified as Alisha Heinrich
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Page A1 | e-Edition | djournal com

By DAVID SHARP Associated Press Jun 29, 2021 Jun 29, 2021 WALDOBORO, Maine • With millions of people having stayed home from places of worship during the coronavirus pandemic, struggling congregations have one key question: How many of them will return? As the pandemic recedes in the United States and in-person services resume, worries of a deepening slide in attendance are universal. Some houses of worship won’t make it. Smaller organizations with older congregations that struggled to adapt during the pandemic are in the greatest danger of a downward spiral from which they can’t recover, said the Rev. Gloria E. White-Hammond, lecturer at the Harvard Divinity School and co-pastor of a church in Boston.

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