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Strategies & Market Trends : The Thread Formerly Known as No Rest For The Wicked -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tim Luke who wrote (75687)11/30/1999 7:07:00 PM
From: Ben Sanford  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90042
 
I understand - it was amazing how quickly ONTR ran up once you put the message out.

Ben



To: Tim Luke who wrote (75687)11/30/1999 7:29:00 PM
From: Tim Luke  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90042
 
dian fossey was murdered protecting the animals she loved....only $40 to adopt one of these guys..this is a great cause and i hope that you guys would consider helping......
dianfossey.org

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. Dian Fossey

In the Virunga volcanoes of central Africa Dian Fossey discovered the gentlest of the great apes. She lived amongst the mountain gorillas for nearly 20 years and shamelessly defended them from poachers.

In Rwanda, she founded the Karisoke Research Centre (1967) to provide the worldís primary focus for mountain gorilla conservation and research.

Through the pages of National Geographic magazine and countless television appearances she focused world attention on the gorillasí plight. She began raising money to pay for anti-poaching, and in 1978 set up the first ranger patrols in Rwanda.

She was murdered by an unknown attacker in the early hours of December 27, 1985, in her cabin at Karisoke.

Her friend Alan Root, the wildlife filmmaker who introduced her to gorillas in 1967, recalled in Swara magazine:

ìAn occupational therapist with lung problems, a great fear of heights and no training in animal behaviour, Dian was hardly tailor-made for the job of following gorillas among the steep ravines of a 14,000-foot, rain-shrouded volcano. With only a two-day crash course on data collection from Jane Goodall to guide her, Dian recorded everything she saw, and from the beginning she saw clearly that gorillas were doomed unless something was done about the uncontrolled encroachment and poaching that was going on.

ìOver the next 13 years Dian collected a vast amount of data on mountain gorillas. Her work, and that of the co-workers who joined her in the later years, not only led to a greater understanding of gorillas, but to a world-wide concern for their safety.î



To: Tim Luke who wrote (75687)11/30/1999 7:46:00 PM
From: Tim Luke  Respond to of 90042
 
CS:

one thing i have learned is you have to keep your money working for you....i have had a major part of mine tied up in CS for several months now....i sold 1/2 at 23 and i have made a great profit on this stock....i'm still very bullish on cs and think even without a buyout this is a 40$ stock...but it's time for me to move on ...i have two (what i believe) very hot plays in the works and the funds will make better use % wise in these plays...tomorrow all of my CS will be sold...things are heating up on my end and i'm looking for a couple 100 to 300% gainers...

this is what i feel is best for me, so for those of you still in cs i think you will see much higher prices in the near term....