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Microcap & Penny Stocks : TSIG.com TIGI (formerly TSIG) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Suzanne Newsome who wrote (32156)7/5/1999 11:49:00 PM
From: chapin  Respond to of 44908
 
We have a banner at NMF. here is a copy of a news letter from NMF also.



Discount card to benefit schools and NMF
A creative fundraising program that will benefit schools and the National Music Foundation has been set up by My MusicCard Co. in St. Petersburg, Fla.
The program involves a discount card that allows individuals to order CDs or cassettes at low prices. The holder of a "MusicCard" can order up to 20 CDs or cassettes at 30 to 40 percent off retail prices. Orders are made from My MusicCard Co.'s inventory of more than 250,000 titles, by calling a toll-free number or accessing a Web site. Once 20 titles are ordered, the card can be "reloaded" for the same discount on up to 10 more albums. There is no "club" or obligation to order.

For every card that is activated or reloaded, My MusicCard Co. will make a generous royalty donation to the Foundation.

The cards will be distributed by middle, junior high, and high schools, as part of a program run by Lifetime Learning Systems of Stamford, Conn., which designs school fundraisers. The company will promote the idea to more than 53,000 schools nationwide this April, which would sign up to begin in September. Interested schools will receive promotion packets which teachers, PTAs, or other school groups would distribute to students. School supporters would buy a card for $10, and the school will receive $5 for each card sold. A individual ordering 20 CDs can save up to $100.

Promotion packets will also include information about how teachers can qualify for awards through NMF's American Music Education Initiative (see page 1).
My MusicCard Co. is a subsidiary of TeleServices International Group, which has invested more than $300,000 in the program, according to TSIG chairman Robert Gordon. "Those who use the MusicCard will not only benefit from substantial savings," Gordon says, "but also from knowing that a significant portion of their dollars help fund the many vital programs of the National Music Foundation."




To: Suzanne Newsome who wrote (32156)7/6/1999 12:19:00 AM
From: cicak  Respond to of 44908
 
Hi Suzanne - it's ironic - but one of things that gives me hope about TSIG is the amount of time that posters with supposedly no vested interest in the company have taken the time to post. :~):~)

Regards,

Phil



To: Suzanne Newsome who wrote (32156)7/6/1999 12:57:00 AM
From: Mylan Hart  Respond to of 44908
 
see mail, just for the fun of it.......



To: Suzanne Newsome who wrote (32156)7/6/1999 1:13:00 AM
From: Timelord  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 44908
 
Suzanne: You are absolutely correct, the relevant question is what is going to happen in the future.

This company has a toxic floorless. In almost all of the situations where a company has had one of these financing instruments, the impact on the stock and the stockholders and the company has been severe. In a lot of cases deadly. The evidence is there in the historical record of the stock charts (yours included), and in the words of the stockholders themselves. This is your relevant information. -

206.253.217.14

You can say there is no problem here, that these other stocks aren't relevant, that the stock charts don't mean anything. That's fine. You see a budding rose, I see a naked emperor. Other people may be interested in this information, and may see it in a different light from you.

Anyway, someone else mentioned that we spend a great deal of time posting about a stock that we have no material interest in, and the point is well taken. I don't see it as wasted time, but I do have other investments to attend to, and I have provided what I think are some good links to learn from if there is a desire to.

Good luck with your investment.

Alex