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to be called Coopersville, it is one of the first subjects she brings up. She describes her problems in the past tense, yet when she cocks her head and purses her lips in a certain way, they seem acutely present. Marie is big boned, but time has eroded her sturdiness. Now 69, she walks with an unsteady gait from a bad knee, and her doctor is concerned about lumps in her breast. She has mannish gray hair, fair skin, and wide eyes that are largely vacant, except when she is momentarily occupied with sadness or anger or some other emotion that defies easy description.Art Noe, her husband of nearly 50 years, sits next to her in his black easy chair. Smaller than his wife, he is red faced and bantam feisty, the 99 pound weakling grown old, with a drinker eyes and a veiny nose. Almost fully recovered from a recent stroke, he has an urge to finish other people sentences, filling the achy silences with patter.There is something wrong with Marie Noe. Whether it was caused by the trauma of her children deaths or actually caused her children deaths is hard to surmise. She may not know herself.was very, I guess you would call it hard to teach, she explains. came down with scarlet fever, and I was one of the ones they experimented on, with different drugs. I guess it took a toll on my um, my noodle, she says, with a chuckle, as I got older I got worse, trying to learn and stuff like that there interrupts. we were married, I would make her sit down and read the dictionary, and take the mathematics tables off the old copy books. Now, she can do a checkbook, she reads books. we got married, I was practically