Topic: Stefanie Powers
Cases on this DVD that they investigate include the suicide of an old friend of Jonathan's, that he believes is really murder; the appearance of someone claiming to be Jennifer's cousin, but seems intent on killing her and the framing ...
Five university students let a prank go too far when they start using a credit card for a non-existent man mistakenly sent to them. They hack into bank records among other things to keep up the charade of the man's existence ...
One recent morning, 22-month-old Lucy Brancazio got dressed all by herself. "Between twelve months and two and a half years, children have an extraordinary hunger for hands-on experience," says Stefanie Powers, a child-development specialist with Zero to Three, a Washington, DC-based nonprofit ...
If your 6-month-old is eyeing your forkful of pasta as it travels to your mouth, take note: "It's gradual," says Stefanie Powers, child-development specialist at Zero to Three in Wash-ington, DC. "Children usually begin at 8 months by raking their finger ...
My 11-month-old, Lily, grabs our cats by the tail. On the other hand, try not to make a baby under 6 months wait more than a few minutes when she's upset, says child-development specialist Stefanie Powers, of Zero to Three, a ...
When my daughter Lily was 11 months old, she grabbed our cats by the tail, flung CDs from their shelves, and crowed like Little Richard on helium. On the other hand, try not to make a baby under 6 months wait more ...
AMERICAN actress Stefanie Powers missed her panto performance as a fairy godmother yesterday when she was detained at Heathrow over a work permit mix-up.. Ms Powers, 67, who starred in the US show Hart To Hart, flew back from Los Angeles yesterday ...
When one of her former college professors recently invited Stacey Greenberg, 34, and her husband to a party - and suggested they bring their two young children along - Greenberg hesitated. "It broke into a million pieces," Greenberg recalls. Mishaps like Greenberg's can ...
If you hear an echo after everything you say, it's probably not sleep deprivation taking its toll -- it's your toddler. Kids do this in order to connect and learn, says Stefanie Powers, a child-development specialist at Zero to Three, in ...