She doesn't want to see what she calls "this hang-dog look" that crosses people's faces when they learn that her son, Hank, her first child, died of acute lymphoblasticleukemia at age 2 in 1972.
But she's willing to tell people the story. At 61, the Morganton resident has learned that revealing personal matters -- something a lady of her generation and upbringing just doesn't do -- can lead to something good.
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Posted by Rob to CML Newswire: Medical And Technical News On Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia at 1/22/2006 12:00:55 PM

