so Gary Coleman did seh him was to be kept alive..documents
surface wid him instructions....now di ex-wife but supposed common-law-wife seh she naw go look pon him body before it burn cause she already seh har goodbyes
di ? is , did she kill him fi him estate , how eva much it is
Re: so Gary Coleman did seh him was to be kept alive..documents
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Under the heading “Instructions for Health Care” — Gary checked a box titled “Choice to Prolong Life” which states, “I want my life to be prolonged as long as possible within the limits of generally accepted health care standards.”
The other option Gary had — “Choice Not to Prolong Life” — was left unchecked.
In the docs, Shannon explains her decision to end Gary’s life saying she was “forced” to pull the plug. She does not explain why she felt forced. </div></div> ]
Nadya Suleman sleeps only three hours a night, is not coping well and has driven her mother into financial ruin.
That’s what her mother Angela says in a new interview obtained by RadarOnline.com.
“I’m totally broke and exhausted,” Angela Suleman says, adding that she has spent so much money helping Nadya she can’t afford to have back surgery that she needs.
She also reveals that Nadya barely sleeps as she tries to cope with having 14 children. “She’s lucky if she gets three straight hours of sleep a night,” Angela told Closer magazine.
“There’s no time for anything else in her life. She had no idea what she was getting into. She has told me that she would never do it again.”
RadarOnline.com previously has documented the tense relationship between Angela and Nadya, and Angela’s belief that her daughter having 14 children is selfish, at best.
“Her sense of values is strange . She has no idea what she’s doing to her kids or me,” Angela says in the new interview. ”No one can tell her what to do.
“I’m broke. I’ve spent thousands to support Nadya and her kids. I lost my house last year as I couldn’t meet the mortgage repayments and had to start renting. I also couldn’t pay my monthly health insurance bill so now I can’t afford the back surgery I need.
“I want to visit my sister in Sweden who recently had a stroke but I just don’t have the money.”
Things in Nadya’s household are still beyond chaotic, Angela reveals. “I just hate listening to Nadya complain all the time about being stressed and tired when I’m doing half of the work with raising her kids,” Angela says.
She reveals that octuplets are all still crammed into one bedroom. And while Nadya has a full-time live in nanny, Angela says, “Its crazy, there are always babies crying, kids writing on the wall, everyone running around.”
The future is filled with uncertainty and worries Angela greatly. “It’s scares me,” she said. “Nadya’s 34 years old and still financially dependent on her parents. I don’t know how she’s going to manage to feed them and if she loses her house because she can’t pay the bills, I don’t know where she’ll live – I don’t have any room for them.”
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:</div><div class="ubbcode-body">•Kim Kardashian may have Bieber fever, but is this fever turning into something seductive? Or are Kim and Justin just friends? </div></div>
Study: Rats Live in New York Subway, Avoid Traps, Like Food
Study: Rats Live in New York Subway, Avoid Traps, Like Food
<span style="font-weight: bold">It only took the NYC Department of Health and the Metro Transit Authority two years</span> to conclude a study that says rats live in subway stations, are hard to catch/kill, and like to dine in subway stations' "refuse room."
<span style="font-weight: bold">Thank you, science. Where would we all be without helpful studies like this</span>? More screwed than we already are, probably. According to the New York Times, this was the first study of its kind, and was commissioned to find out what can be done to curb rampant rat populations in New York's subway system. So, what can be done? The Times spoke to 86-year-old Solomon Peeples, former director of the Bureau of Pest Control Services, who offered this analysis: "We're no match for them, as far as I'm concerned. Man does not stand no chance." Coming from a man nearly as old as the subway, that's probably an accurate assessment.
The "refuse room" is a storage room for garbage in each subway station that obviously attracts rats. The rodentologist who lead the study, Robert M. Corrigan, called the refuse room "a restaurant" for rats, and said the current poisoning program should be expanded from a tracks only policy to include the refuse rooms. Luckily we don't have to worry about dazed, poisoned rats showing up on trains, as the paper goes on to quote a 1976 academic study that says, "rats with high blood pressure should not ride the subways too often or too long: the stress of noise, vibration, and crowding may kill some of them before their time." Science.
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