Mr Hayday says he also helped to find some of the cast for the film from behind the wheel. Tim Roth, the star of Pulp Fiction, is looking at the script after being tipped off about the production by a friend who had been a passenger.And the director Graham Baker (Alien Nation and The Omen – The Final Conflict), hailed the cab at Great Marlborough Street.. Mandy Allwood, who six months ago lost eight octuplets produced by in- vitro fertility (IVF) treatment, is pregnant again, the publicist Max Clifford has confirmed. Ms Allwood (right), 32, of Solihull, West Midlands, who became pregnant six weeks ago by her lover, Paul Hudson, said: “It’s a miracle.
It’s happened so quickly we even stunned the doctors – again. We think it’s just the one this time – and we’re more than happy with that.
“This just confirms to me that we did the right thing by trying to have all eight babies before It was our decision to try and give them all life When we lost them I thought my world was ending. A part of me died with each one.”Her eight-baby pregnancy – the first in Britain – ended in miscarriages last October and she and Mr Hudson, 38, were criticised for continuing the multiple pregnancy. The News of the World had agreed to pay her a reported pounds 1m if all eight were born.Ms Allwood’s gynaecologist advised her to undergo embryo reduction treatment to enable two or three foetuses to have a greater chance of survival.
There were also calls for restrictions on National Health Service fertility treatment after it emerged that Ms Allwood already had a son by her former husband, Simon Pugh.Mr Clifford, who was hired by the couple during the eight-baby pregnancy, said: “This seals Mandy’s relationship with Paul They’ve been trying since it was physically possible.”. A life-saving fight against leukaemia has reunited sisters who divided by the fear that hospitals inspired in one of them. After three years apart they are now preparing to visit a clinic together so a blood transfusion can begin. Angela Latham, 34, has leukaemia but her sister, Susan Squires, 39, had refused to donate bone marrow for a transplant because of her fear of hospitals Butnow she has agreed to go to a clinic. Mrs Latham is to accompany her for support.
Ms Squires agreed to help after meeting her sister’s consultant, haematologist Dr Paul Kelsey, of the Victoria Hospital in Blackpool, at her flat in the town last Friday.Mrs Latham said: “I’m shell-shocked but very happy …
I saw my sister for two hours on Friday but we’re letting things calm down again now.”The news has delighted Mrs Latham’s husband, Paul, and children Ashly, 12, and Bernadette, 6 Ms Squires said: “I just hope this will save Angela. I am still very nervous but I think I will be able to cope.”. Sports fans bought “lots” for their memories when one of the world’s most famous stadiums went under the hammer in a unique auction. Hundreds made bids for the contents of Cardiff Arms Park, ranging from sections of the pitch, seating, flagpoles, lighting generators, turnstiles and even the changing rooms. More than 3,000 lots were on offer, and proceeds of the auction will be ploughed back into the grassroots of the game.
The park is being demolished and replaced with a new pounds 114 million stadium. Fans paid pounds 200 for a five- yard strip of turf, and the red plastic seats went for pounds 20 each. A Cardiff businessman, Giovanni Malacrimo, paid more than pounds 1,000 for the president’s suite, including carpets, panelling and curtains, which he plans to recreate in a city centre restaurants.. Sex education works in reducing teenage pregnancy, delaying the age of first sexual intercourse and encouraging condom use, the British Medical Association said today.
