NewStats: 3,265,460 , 8,186,787 topics. Date: Sunday, 15 June 2025 at 04:21 AM 52363s

6z3e3g

Eghost247's Posts 6g4g4c

Eghost247's Posts

(22) (of 124 pages)

eghost247(m): 11:51am On Mar 05, 2012
some nairlanders are just surprising
eghost247(m): 11:49am On Mar 05, 2012
^^^^^ well said
eghost247(m): 5:58am On Mar 05, 2012
both to their respective tribes
eghost247(m): 2:50pm On Mar 04, 2012
[size=15pt]Spartacus Vengeance Episode 6[/size]
eghost247(m): 11:56am On Mar 04, 2012
lets see
eghost247(m): 11:15am On Mar 04, 2012
well guess other posters have said and given all the necessary advice all i can say is don't use fear as a way of getting him to count numbers
eghost247(m): 10:10pm On Mar 03, 2012
never heard of this
eghost247(m): 7:35pm On Mar 03, 2012
sad rip
eghost247(m): 12:07pm On Mar 03, 2012
touchscreen
eghost247(m): 11:01pm On Mar 02, 2012
ojogbontomoye:

Ikemba was a child to Bianca? muhehe
[size=15pt]^^^^Hahahahaha, very nice Tribute Rip Ojukwu[/size]
eghost247(m): 3:20pm On Mar 02, 2012
Hahaha nice one Ndlea
eghost247(m): 2:30pm On Mar 02, 2012
Prison Break Season 1
eghost247(m): 2:29pm On Mar 02, 2012
^^^^^ Hahahahaha
eghost247(m): 11:31am On Mar 02, 2012
Lillian Hartley and Allan Marks are officially the oldest newlyweds ever.


With more than 193 combined years under their belts, 95-year-old Hartley and 98-year-old Marks broke a Guinness World Record for the oldest aggregate age of a couple on when the two tied the knot Wednesday.

The couple said, “I do,” in a civil ceremony in Indio, Calif., on Wednesday after 18 years together, according to the Desert Sun. They unknowingly sured the previous record of 191 aggregate years, which a French couple set in 2002.

“We talked about it for years, but our lives were so busy that I just never got around to it,” the bride told ABC News, citing their busy lifestyle filled with travel, trips to temple on Saturdays and watching their favorite basketball team, the Los Angeles Lakers. “We just decided to go to Indio and have the marriage ceremony in one day.

“We don’t know for sure what’s going to happen, so I’m not taking any chances. I want to be with Allan for the rest of my life,” she said.

“I want to be with Lillian for the rest of my life,” Marks echoed.

Riverside County Clerk’s Office Deputy Commissioner of Marriages Yvonne Cruz, who performed the ceremony, said Hartley and Marks’ love was evident from the moment they walked in.

“When they came to my window, I spoke to her first and she says, ‘I want to marry this man,’” Cruz recalled. “He puts his arm around her waist and says, ‘I want to be with her for the rest of my life.’ And she says, ‘I want to be together forever.’”
Cruz, who has officiated thousands of marriages over the past seven years, including one two years ago for an 82- and 83-year-old, said Marks was “one of the most romantic grooms” she’d ever seen, at any age.

“She told us that he tells her he loves her at least three or four times a day,” Cruz said.

During the time the couple was at the clerk’s office, Cruz recounted how the groom gestured lovingly at his bride, put his arm around her, kept giving her pecks on the cheek and told her how much he loved her. “Little things that added up to one big picture that these two were incredibly, incredibly in love,” she said.

Cruz helped Hartley and Marks fill out the paperwork and helped them from the main lobby to another room, where they exchanged vows. (Marks tried to kiss his bride a little too early, but who can blame him.)

“You see couples who come in and they’re in love, but in their case it was just … the degree of their love, sured even their ages. It was just so beautiful. It had to be one of the most beautiful ceremonies I’ve ever officiated,” Cruz said.

The bride and groom were both widowers when they met 18 years ago at temple in Palm Springs on the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish year. He, a retired veterinarian, talked up the retired paralegal, complimenting her dress, and one thing led to another.

“I believe in fate and destiny a little bit and I think that was meant to be,” Hartley said. “I had been a widow for six years and I really loved my freedom. …I said, ‘Oh, I don’t want a relationship,’…and then he came along, and somehow hooked me.”

The duo is certainly one to learn from. “The wisdom, the knowledge and the love that they have for one another,” Cruz said, “that’s something that you don’t see every day.”
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/headlines/2012/03/meet-the-oldest-newlyweds-ever-elderly-couple-breaks-wedding-world-record/

1 Like

eghost247(m): 10:12am On Mar 02, 2012
ekt_bear:

The comments here. . . i dunno whether to laugh or cry
hahahaha
eghost247(m): 10:03am On Mar 02, 2012
straight up wickedness
eghost247(m): 9:52am On Mar 02, 2012
Rip anyway
eghost247(m): 9:50am On Mar 02, 2012
Rubbish
eghost247(m): 9:48am On Mar 02, 2012
at least he did something
eghost247(m): 11:50pm On Mar 01, 2012
Portsmouth may fold before the end of Championship season says of cash strapped club
Portsmouth face the most critical six weeks of their 113-year history after the insolvent club’s warned yesterday they could face liquidation before the season’s end.
revor Birch, whom the High Court appointed as last month after HM Revenue and Customs issued a winding-up petition against the club, has told key staff there is only enough cash to cover Portsmouth's running costs until mid-April.

As an officer of the court Birch will be obliged to cease trading when it becomes clear that no alternative sources of funding can be made available.

“We are looking at all possible options for raising further revenues in the very short term but we realise there is only so much that can be realistically achieved,” he said.

“Unless something significant happens, there is a real possibility we may not be able to fulfil the season’s fixtures.”

Birch told the club’s manager, Michael Appleton, he will again review the situation next Friday.
Appleton said: “The situation is bad enough that we won’t be able to see the season out unless something is done to sort everything out.”

A senior source at Fratton Park added: “There is a big risk this club stops trading. Whether in two weeks or three weeks the prospect is there we won’t finish the season. It’s an unholy mess.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/teams/portsmouth/9116030/Portsmouth-may-fold-before-the-end-of-Championship-season-says--of-cash-strapped-club.html
This tipping point has been reached after it emerged that the first of four monthly £550,000 instalments falls due next month on what was previously a £2.47 million debt to the club’s former owner, Sacha Gaydamak.

The debt cannot be deferred since it has been assigned from Premier League parachute payments, money that had been included in the club’s cash flow planning as income.

The League will pay the funds directly to Gaydamak’s vehicle in accordance with legally binding agreements struck by the club’s former , Andrew Andronikou, at the time of the last insolvency in May 2010.

Andronikou and Birch are in dispute as to whether the repayment were made clear prior to the latter’s appointment.

Birch hopes to cover the shortfall with player loans and is understood to be exploring a number of alternative investment strategies but no one at the club would elaborate on what these are.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, one staff member told of the atmosphere at the club.

“Trevor Birch sent out an in-house email setting out what’s happened with the parachute payments going to the previous owner and that we’re not likely to receive anything from the Premier League.

“The majority of the staff say they’ve had enough. In all of this you can only the club so far because there are families involved and you realise you can’t give everything any more because you don’t now how long it will last.

"But we want to see the club survive and get through this period.

"The positive side of me says we’ll come through it come what may.

"But then every day you hear more realism and that the club could go out of existence. But without seeing the facts, you don’t know.”

John Westwood, whose tattoos and distinctive tros have made him Portsmouth’s most famous fan, articulated how fans’ despair is turning to distrust.

“It’s like seeing a family member on life ,” he said.

“Trevor Birch has been refreshingly honest but there is real cynicism among fans.

"This club is the heartbeat of the city and a big part of people’s lives. The foreign investors don’t realise that communities survive on the identity of their football club.”

It has been chaos at Portsmouth since shortly after they lifted the FA Cup under Harry Redknapp’s management in 2008.

Assets belonging to Gaydamak’s father, Arkady, were frozen by an Israeli court and in parallel the son’s funding for the club dried up.

With a cash flow shortfall of around £10 million a season at the dilapidated Fratton Park, Pompey soon collapsed.

If insolvency and istration turns to liquidation and they are finally extinguished in mid-season, it would have a significant impact on the Championship table.

Results and points accrued in matches involving Pompey would be expunged.

West Ham United, who occupy the second automatic-promotion slot, would lose six points and be supplanted in second place by Reading.

It would also have a damaging effect on the six clubs who are still due to host Pompey. The fixtures would not take place, producing a deficit of around £500,000 in budgeted income for each club.

However, a source close to Balram Chainrai, the former Gaydamak business partner to whom Portsmouth defaulted after a previous insolvency, confirmed to Telegraph Sport that his Portpin vehicle is ready to assume control again rather than to see Pompey liquidated.

Chainrai claims the club owe him £29 million.

The validity of those claims is the subject of a legal challenge but even if the valid debts are reduced he is certain to remain a significant creditor.

Andronikou, who works as to the club’s parent, Convers Sports Initiatives, said: “This club has got a better income than most of its competitors.

"You can’t say it isn’t sustainable. We control 80 per cent of creditors and so we won’t allow them to trash the club.

"We’re trying to protect the club and them.”

eghost247(m): 11:29pm On Mar 01, 2012
what
eghost247(m): 4:56pm On Mar 01, 2012
yeah u might be right about ants

1 Like

eghost247(m): 4:54pm On Mar 01, 2012
ok now
eghost247(m): 4:53pm On Mar 01, 2012
Dont Like this Poundo yam tastes diffrent Pounded Yam is the real deal
eghost247(m): 4:52pm On Mar 01, 2012
Lmao
eghost247(m): 3:48pm On Mar 01, 2012
dont get your point @Op

(22) (of 124 pages)

(Go Up)

Sections: How To . 34
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or s on Nairaland.