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t this time it seems we are getting closer and closer to paying off our mortgage and I have a 12 month plan to allow that to happen. God only knows what will happen when that time comes. Will I be out of my mind and expand and keep on expanding as I have stated in the past or will we just get Cosac to the point that it can always function, no matter what? Tonight as I sit here and ask a few people to go up to the store to buy some lotto tickets, I can only imagine what would happen if I win the $82 million. I know that if I win, the "I"
becomes a “we” for a lot of people because I would be even busier then I currently am. I would expand, but only to expand where my hands could let go of current programs allowing my brain to reach out and start many more programs in all places on the USA map then of course there are places in maps outside of the USA where my little head can start to prepare. I want Cosac to be at a point where I don't always know what is going on. I would like Cosac to have many hands holding the reins than just mine. For instance I had no idea our joint project in Haiti with the Chick
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Most Americans are “Two Paychecks” away from being homeless. Help the shelter stay alive. We are trying to pay the mortgage off! To help, please send a check or money order to: COSAC Foundation Burn That Mortgage Campaign P.O. Box 292-577 Davie, Fl 33329
Grant Foundation nearly doubled in space allowing our phanages to not serve more kids but having our very own
had bed oronly now doc-
tor to head the task of starting a feeding program for children who are almost at the end of their life. I know some of you may be wondering
why it takes a doctor to put food in the belly of a starving kid. Well even today ten years later I now find out feeding a starving kid and trying to bring it back to life can be very dangerous if you just let the child eat food. There is a process for everything and even giving food to a child who has not seen it for weeks can be dangerous to their health. It is a lot different then not eating for a week or two. To get Cosac to the point of not knowing how many people we serve, or save per year would be a wonderful thing. Not knowing exactly how many beds we have would be a blessing. Not knowing how (Continued on page 6)
Larry Parchman
Don't Settle For Less
H
urricane Wilma destroyed a good part of our physical structure as well as mentally demoralizing us. As commercial property owners, I am sure many of you who had filed claims were severely screwed. As far as personal homeowner’s policies and claims for your houses, I am quite confident you too became screwed. Rule number one; if you pay for a policy you must force yourself to react in a defense mode at the time of filing the claim. You prepare yourself to the point where you are convinced that the insurance company is going to rip you off. You must protect yourself and your property value. Take many pictures and gather as much evidence as you can at the very beginning. The insurance company will tell you that they are there to help you, when in fact they are there to take as much as they can away from you. I don't want this to sound like every adjuster and every insurance company is there to rip you off (Continued on page 10)
Dear Readers, Please keep our friend Cathy in your prayers.
-Homeless Voice
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Hospitals Dumping Homeless
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uthorities in Los Angeles are studying a surveillance tape that shows an elderly woman in a hospital gown wandering the street, as they investigate the practice of hospitals and police agencies dumping homeless people in Skid Row, a ramshackle district in the city centre. Carol Ann Reyes, 63, was discharged from a hospital on Monday. A surveillance camera outside a homeless shelter showed Ms Reyes walking from the direction of a taxi that had just driven away. She wandered the street for about three minutes before a shelter staff member took her inside. Several hospitals have acknowledged that they put some homeless patients into cabs headed for the area because it offers a chance for the patient to get services and shelter. “We have been looking into homelessdumping, and this (tape) gives us another example of what has been going on,” a spokesman for the city attorney’s office said. (AP)
“I thank God ever day to be alive,” Larry Parchman says as he rests in a white plastic chair enjoying his relaxation in room 216 the “Cosac Suite”.
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man lies bloody upon the Broward General Hospitals operating table. Both legs severely broken and his left knee completely split down the middle. It took six hours to repair his knee and six months in Manor Pines to repair his body. In September of 2003 this furniture mover for United Vanlines never imagined a new life
peering through bushes. “I thank God ever day to be alive,” Larry Parchman says as he rests in a white plastic chair enjoying his relaxation in room 216 the “Cosac Suite”. While leaving the grocery store, pushing a shopping cart, Larry began to make his way across the tracks. With (Continued on page 11)