Who Owns Drug-rehabs.org?
Question by Sue: Who owns drug-rehabs.org?
I went to this website and it says that it is a non-profit organization name “Drug-Rehabs.Org”.
I have not been able to find who owns it or any information about the organization. The “about us” part of their website does not give anything. I looked into a site before and they wouldn’t give me the true information about them and they called and pressured me. I finally found out they were owned by the Church of Scientology. That is Ok, but I don’t like the deception.
Anyone know who owns this organization?
Best answer:
Harold Ramis, Ghostbusters Star and Comedy Icon, Dead at 69
Harold Ramis, Ghostbusters Star And Comedy Icon, Dead At 69
Filed under: drug rehab treatment tn
Philip Seymour Hoffman. <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/02/02/philip-seymour-hoffman-dead-dies_n_4713623.html" target="_blank">Hoffman was found dead of an apparent heroin overdose</a> on Feb. 2, 2014 in New York City. He was 46 …
Read more on Huffington Post UK
Richard Quest: the voice of choice
Filed under: drug rehab treatment tn
In between Leeds and London, he spent a year at Vanderbilt University, in Tennessee, in the United States, where he was news director of the campus radio station, WRVU; and once he'd returned to England and finished his Bar exams, he applied to the BBC …
Read more on South China Morning Post
Adolescent Helpline Brings Hope to Young Addicts
Adolescent Helpline Brings Hope to Young Addicts
Filed under: drug rehab centers in nj
Drug and alcohol rehab centers provide a variety of treatment options including drug detox, dual diagnosis, individual and group therapy along with mandatory education programs. The treatments available at rehab centers can help any patient achieve …
Read more on Ticker Report
Dennis Rodman checked into alcohol rehab center
Filed under: drug rehab centers in nj
How Do I Make My Essay More Descriptive?
Question by AnyssaK: How do i make my essay more descriptive?
A desperate, young woman gave up everything for something that could have ended her life at any given moment: crystal meth. That young woman was my older sister Laurel. My sister never really enjoyed school, so she dropped out at age sixteen. Shortly after dropping out, she went to live with her father in Ohio (we had different dads). While living there, my sister met her boyfriend, Nick, who made his money by dealing drugs. She eventually moved in with him and started using. Laurel did not only change her life, but changed me and my families’ as well.
My sister thought her life was perfect. All she cared about was meth, and when she would be able to get her next high. However; once my mom found out she was using, she immediately made her move back down to Georgia. Consequently, Laurel was sent to a rehab center for the first time. Unfortunately, she relapsed shortly after being released. On the other hand, it was very hard for her to find the drugs she wanted sometimes. Therefore, she would go days without getting high and have extreme withdrawal symptoms. I remember one night she came home from a friend’s house and told my mom she had not eaten in 3 or four days. My mom tried giving her a pack of cheese crackers and Laurel threw them in her face.