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Pastimes : The Big Tex House of Coin

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To: Gush who wrote (3372)4/21/1999 1:41:00 AM
From: Jeff  Read Replies (1) of 19297
 
AQCI................

reason's why i love this stock...........

patented technology........

niche market.........

still unknown by most investor's......

just imagine when the " press" gets a hold of this companies story........tapping an unused resource........forgotten underwater wood........

now you ask........so what?...........whats the big deal...........

well folks.........READ THIS ARTICLE and put 2 and 2 together!!!!!!!!

YOU HAVE NO IDEA HOW BIG THIS IS GOING TO BE!!!!!!!!!

patented technology.........press coverage...........big contracts........unlimited use for this technology anywhere in the world......enviromental groups will push the use of this.........

then you add in a rumored MM short position............

you all can trade this for pennies if you want............but when the press gets a hold of this story.........and more and more people find out about it ( not just internet investors ) you are going to wish you held all these cheap shares you can buy now.........

do your DD........

its hard to see a gem early on.........but this aint no i-nut fluff stock.........this is real world stuff folks..........and something that can help one of the world's biggest problems...........

HERE'S THE ARTICLE........... good luck to all

AQCI- The world needs your patented technology more than ever!

 Reprint of article from Today's Toronto Star

 April 20, 1999

 Decline of forests called 'relentless'

 'We cannot go on shaving the Earth,' chair says

 By Brian McAndrew
 Toronto Star Environment Reporter

 The planet's forests are disappearing at a frightening rate of 15
 million hectares each year, the inaugural report of the World
 Commission on Forests says.

 ''We cannot go on shaving the Earth,'' commission co-chair Ola
 Ullsten, a former prime minister of Sweden, said in a telephone
 interview.

 The report, made public yesterday in Washington, D.C., follows
 three years of research and public hearings around the world.

 Nearly all of the yearly decline - 14 million hectares - comes from
 tropical rain forests, the commission found.

 Many countries in Asia, Africa and South America are affected.

 The 15 million hectare decline in the world's forests - an area
 equivalent in size to England and Wales - has happened every
 year since 1980, the report says.

 The rate at which forests are disappearing can be compared to
 razing an area the size of High Park every six minutes or
 clear-cutting Rouge Park, the largest urban park in North
 America, in three hours.

 ''The decline is relentless,'' the report says. ''We suspect it
 could change the very character of the planet and of the human
 enterprise within a few years unless we make some choices.''

 The commission was formed after leaders in 30 countries,
 including former prime minister Pierre Trudeau, became alarmed
 about the state of the world's forests following the Rio de
 Janeiro Earth Summit in 1992.

 The report says:

 Original frontier forests have all but disappeared in 76
 countries, and declined by at least 95 per cent in 11 countries.

 The planet's original forest cover of 6 billion hectares has
 been reduced to 3.6 billion hectares.

 Just 40 corporations control 115 million hectares of the
 world's prime forests.

 Biologists say the disappearing forests have created ''an
 extinction crisis unmatched in at least 65 million years,'' the
 report says.

 One-quarter of the world's plant and animal species could
 disappear in less than 50 years at a rate of about 130 species per
 day, the report warns.

 Already in the tropical regions, 15,000 species are becoming
 extinct each year because of the loss of forests from logging or
 cutting and burning to create farmland, the report says.

 Ullsten said there was no need to continue cutting down
 primary forests, those whose trees have stood for hundreds of
 years with little human interference.

 The world could satisfy its demand for wood by limiting
 logging to trees that have grown back in forests that were
 already cut or by creating tree plantations in tropical regions, he
 said.

 Fast-growing tree plantations would provide a big economic
 boost for developing countries in the tropics, Ullsten said.

 The commission recommends the creation of a Forest Trust, a
 citizens' group from all parts of the world to work toward
 solving the forest crisis.

 Ullsten said he would expect Canada to play an important
 leadership role because of the country's huge forestry industry.

 Canada has 245 million hectares of forests, third largest in the
 world behind the Russian Federation with 764 million hectares
 and Brazil with 551 million hectares, the report says.

 ''We are taking a political approach. We want to put pressure
 on governments,'' Ullsten said. ''This can't be done by just
 saying it once. We have to keep nagging.''
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