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Lvis Milwaukee Public Schools free driver s education program will more than double teens served this fall MILWAUKEE ?A pregnant Milwaukee woman, Monique Stewart and her unborn baby were killed when police say a speeding car hit the familys vehicle Sunday.Monday afternoon, TMJ4 News saw crews still cleaning up and restoring power after the crash at Brown Deer and Servite Drive. Investigators say they vehicle that hit into the family was speeding at 100 miles an hour into a family, forever changing their lives. I walked over there and I seen a whole lot of heartbreaking, said witness Trashawn Stamps.Stamps says he could hear heartbreak in the voices of the people who were just in the crash, They said someone had passed away. The person killed was 32-year-old Monique Stewart. Investigator say she was eight months pregnant. Surveillance video shows the bla <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.es>stanley taza</a> ck van she was in, turning left onto Servite. Police say a car speeding down Brown Deer Road at 100 miles an hour T-boned them. The driver police say, is an 18-year-old man. The car was driving was driving very reckless, <a href=https://www.cups-stanley.ca>stanley cup</a> said Trashawn Stamps.Invest <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.uk>stanley cups uk</a> igators say they tried to save Stewarts unborn baby in an emergency C-section, but the child died. Two eight-year-old children along with Stewart s brother and mother were also in the car. A family member tells TMJ4 News the mom and brother remain hospitalized Monday.Police say the 18-year-old speeding driver who hit the family has been arrested. Charges are still pending. Xafl The Sussexes make first public appearance at the queen s Platinum Jubilee THE HAGUE, Netherlands ?The Dutch inventor of the cassette <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.ca>stanley cup</a> tape, the medium of choice for millions of bedroom mixtapes, has died at the age of 94. Philips, the company where he also helped develop the compact disc, confirmed that Lou Ottens died Saturday at age 94. Ottens joined Philips in 1952 and was head of the Dutch companys product development department when he began work on an alternative for existing tape recorders with their cumbersome larg <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.fr>stanley thermos</a> e spools of tape. His goal was simple: Make tapes and their players far more portable and easier to use. Ottens completed his final product in <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.co.uk>stanley thermos mug</a> 1962, which quickly revolutionized the audio industry. More than 100 billion cassettes were sold worldwide.
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