Interviews

Air plants make unusual houseplants that don't require soil

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Culture   来源:Transportation  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Any technology they employ is not linked to a business by its internet address and is bought with cash.

Any technology they employ is not linked to a business by its internet address and is bought with cash.

"I am terrified of spiders," Billy said. "And I've come to the worst place in the world for them."If any spiders come in the van, Lucy will be in charge of getting rid of them."

Air plants make unusual houseplants that don't require soil

MND is a terminal condition that affects people's ability to move, talk and breathe.Six people are diagnosed with it in the UK every day, according to Brain Research UK.Billy is raising money for four charities that fund research into MND and support those living with it: Motor Neurone Disease Association and the My Name'5 Doddie Foundation in the UK, and in Australia, FightMND and MND Australia.

Air plants make unusual houseplants that don't require soil

Opened in 1897, Rockingham Road will forever be the spiritual home of the Poppies.It was the archetypal non-league ground, hemmed into a residential area just outside the town centre and at the very heart of its community. It was adored by home fans and intimidating for visitors.

Air plants make unusual houseplants that don't require soil

Its main stand featured a towering roof that amplified the noise of a capacity support of up to 6,264 at the time of its closing.

In 1976, history was made at the ground as Kettering became the first British club to play with a sponsor on their shirts in a game against Bath City.But opponents argue it's being used as a cheaper alternative to providing adequate social or medical support.

One of them is Dr Ramona Coelho, a GP in London, Ontario, whose practice serves many marginalised groups and those struggling to get medical and social support. She's part of a Maid Death Review Committee, alongside Dr Trouton, which examines cases in the province.Dr Coelho told me that Maid was "out of control". "I wouldn't even call it a slippery slope," she says "Canada has fallen off a cliff."

"When people have suicidal ideations, we used to meet them with counselling and care, and for people with terminal illness and other diseases we could mitigate that suffering and help them have a better life," she says. "Yet now we are seeing that as an appropriate request to die and ending their lives very quickly."While at Dr Coelho's surgery I was introduced to Vicki Whelan, a retired nurse whose mum Sharon Scribner died in April 2023 of lung cancer, aged 81. Vicki told me that in her mum's final days in hospital she was repeatedly offered the option of Maid by medical staff, describing it as like a "sales pitch".

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