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uhzc Neda al Jihad Release Afghanistan Compilation Video
« le: Décembre 13, 2024, 05:10:23 pm »
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 A re stanley mug d-faced auction house was forced to withdraw a letter it believed was written and signed by the late President Ronald Reagan while he was suffering from Alzheimer s disease after it discovered it was a forgery.The autographed letter was supposed to be auctioned off this month, but Bill Panagopulos, president of Alexander Autographs in Greenwich, Conn., told CBSNews the letter was withdrawn after the forger came forward and admitted his handiwork.Originally it was believed Reagan wrote the note to a friend in February of 1998, about four years after he mostly disappeared from public view following his announcement that he had Alzheimer s Disease. In the letter he told a friend,  Individuals like you give me the courage and inspiration to move forward, and with your prayers and God s grace, we ll know we will be able to face this long latest challenge.  He adds a P.S:  I didn t write this with Nancy s help.  But Panagopulos said the letter was actually a form letter that Reagan wrote in  stanley cup website 1994 to thank those who expressed sympathy for his affliction. Reagan had hundreds copied onto his official letterhead.Panagopulos said the forger, who he refused to identify, somehow got a hold of one and used a heavy felt-tip pen, which Reagan often used, to trace over it. The forger allegedl stanley thermos y added mistakes, crossed out words and changed some of the text and the date.        Panagopulos said the letter fooled everyone who saw it.  We showed it to 3 or 4 prominent collectors, and they also Xedu Composer s Son Charged in Sylvie Cachay s Death
 The Australian Medical Board has fined a doctor $25,000 because he told patients he could cure their cancer with a special diet, along with supplements and green tea. This landmark case could help discourage other fake cancer treatments, and save lives.     William Barnes, a doctor based in Perth, advertised online that he offered non toxic herbal and nutritional treatment for cancer, which began with a hair analysis  deemed unscientific by a medical review board  and ended with Barnes prescribing green tea polyphenols, genistein from soy beans, curcumin from turmeric, quercetin, vitamin C, selenium, anti-cancer herbs, and mineral replacements. According to Byron Kaye in the Medical Observer: Dr Barnes was formally reprimanded for acting improperly, banned from advertising unproven cancer treatments and ordered to pay the fine. He was also ordered to have any patients with cancer read a form stating that he supported treatment provided by oncologists [including] chemotherapy and other drug therapy. The consent  stanley cup form states that the patient  822 stanley quencher 0;understand that there is no evidence that taking any of these substances or receiving them intravenously will cure my stanley cup  cancer or slow the progression of my cancer. It seems a fitting punishment that this doctor should be required to tell his patients about cancer treatments that have been proven to work. Though some doctors think green tea could be a useful