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To: Mark Fowler who wrote (142408)5/20/2002 6:18:35 PM
From: 10K a day  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
Dude, you need to send me some of that stuff...



To: Mark Fowler who wrote (142408)5/20/2002 8:03:26 PM
From: H James Morris  Respond to of 164684
 
June 17 1/2 GG calls up 84%, July 20 GG calls up 113%.
Its taken 20 years but Ike finally gets to retire in Monte Carlo.
Bon Jour mon amie. Just don't call me comrade.



To: Mark Fowler who wrote (142408)5/21/2002 12:16:59 AM
From: H James Morris  Respond to of 164684
 
Any chance the Fowler/Harmond road show will be performing at the e-conference, while Dizzie Tudor sings her eToys song??
BELLEVUE, Wash., May 20, 2002 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- drugstore.com, inc. (Nasdaq: DSCM chart, msgs), the leading Internet retailer for health, beauty, wellness and pharmacy products announced today that Chairman Peter Neupert and CFO Bob Barton will be presenting at the Goldman, Sachs and Co. Third Annual Internet and e-Commerce Conference on Wednesday, May 22 at 2:50PM in Las Vegas, NV.



To: Mark Fowler who wrote (142408)5/21/2002 12:23:54 AM
From: H James Morris  Respond to of 164684
 
Federal authorities are investigating whether software giant Computer Associates inflated its revenue by more than $500m in 1998-99 to enrich senior management, the Wall Street Journal has reported.
Computer Associates is one of a string of firms - mainly in hi-tech sectors - to have come under scrutiny in the tougher regulatory mood following the collapse of energy trader Enron.

Last week, the firm admitted that third parties had been subpoenaed as part of an investigation into its accounts, which is being conducted jointly by the Securities and Exchanges Commission and the US Justice Department.

The company's shares, which have already lost two-thirds of their value this year, fell by another 4%, contributing to a nervous day on Wall Street.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite index closed down almost 2.3% at 1,702 points, while the broader Dow Jones Industrial Average lost some 1.2% to 10,230.

Money for nothing

According to the Wall Street Journal, the probe is focusing on whether Computer Associates inflated revenue to boost its share price.