Parker pauline yvonne biography template
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Pauline Yvonne Parker (May 26, 1938)
[currently Hilary Nathan]
Pauline was born on May 26, 1938 in Christchurch, NZ, as third child of Herbert Detlev Rieper (aged 43) and Honorah Mary Parker (aged 29). As a young child of five, Pauline contracted osteomyelitis and was hospitalized for nine months. She was near death at one point, and the illness and treatment were extremely painful for her. Little Pauline was reported to have borne the pain bravely and quietly. Two years later, at the age of seven, she was forced to undergo a second painful operation to drain infection from her leg. Pauline's illness left her with a permanent, though not crippling, handicap which would excuse her from physical education and sports throughout childhood. Pauline had chronic, recurring pain in her leg throughout her childhood and youth and she took pain killers quite frequently throughout this time. Otherwise, her childhood was described by her father as "uneventful." She attended a local primary scho
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3.2.6 Parker, Pauline Yvonne.
Pauline Yvonne Parker was born on May 26, 1938, in Christchurch, New Zealand, the third-born child of Honora Mary parkerar, 29, and Herbert Detlev Rieper, 43. As a young child of fem, Pauline contracted osteomyelitis and was hospitalized for nine months. She was nära death at one point, and the illness and treatment were extremely painful for her. Little Pauline was reported to have borne the pain bravely and tyst. Two years later, at the age of sju, she was forced to undergo a second painful operation to drain infection from her leg. Pauline's illness left her with a permanent, though not crippling, handikapp which would excuse her from physical education and sports throughout childhood. Pauline had chronic, recurring pain in her leg throughout her childhood and ungdom and she took pain killers ganska frequently throughout this time. Otherwise, her childhood was described bygd her father as "uneventful." She attended a local
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Few major crimes have reverberated through New Zealand history as much as the now near-mythic case of the Parker-Hulme murder. The brutal killing of Honorah Parker in 1954 by her daughter Pauline and her best friend Juliet Hulme remains one of the most notorious events to occur in the country over the past century. To this day, the case leaves a grisly mark on Christchurch. A media sensation in its day, the Parker-Hulme trial became the stuff of armchair psychology speculation, pop culture curiosities, and a worldwide moral panic regarding the supposed inherent darkness of young women.
In a society preoccupied with the lurid details of true crime, it was inevitable that the case of Pauline and Juliet would become the subject of decades' worth of interest. How could a story about an obsessive pair of teenage girls driven by delusions to kill not inspire such fascination? Cases of matricide committed by adolescent women remain rare. According to a report by CBS, approximately 82