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To: D.McQ who wrote (410)10/25/1997 5:15:00 PM
From: Charliss  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 4571
 
<oooooohhhh I want more shares....the more I do this the more I want to buy BCMD stock. I wish the market was open.......>

Darlene

Hi again Darlene. Psychotherapy is always coming up with schemes to treat our modern day addictions and compulsions. However, you and I both know that Market Obsession in general, and Mining Fixation in particular, have long been stubbornly resistant to any attempts at treatment. In some instances, some people thus inflicted have even delusionaly insisted that the Nasdaq, for instance, is really doing business on Sundays and that any evidence to the contrary is actually misinformation that is part of a dark conspiracy created by our lovers, spouses, or family members, etc, etc....in order to sabotage the continuation of the investor's growth and individuality.

Personally, I find that arranging my weekends (when the market is supposedly closed) so that I may make some postings to the threads I belong to helps to soften the intensity and the anguish of the weekend withdrawl. It is sort of like methadone, or a support group.

Anyway, as one our famous American figures says: "I hear your pain..."

Best to you and everyone else in our group here.

Charliss



To: D.McQ who wrote (410)10/25/1997 5:42:00 PM
From: Eakole  Respond to of 4571
 
Hi Darlene,
This post is in response to your observations as to why DELGF is not the same as BCMD and . . . how I concluded what to expect from DELGF.

My first DELGF alert was pretty much the same as the one reasoned for BCMD. It languished for a long time in a low and tight trading range and broke out with an obvious increase in volume. I bought in after the breakout at $9.50 and watched it gradually climb to $22, the price that I calculated when I bought the stock would be a good time to get out. It was during that time frame that Delgratia hired two other independent and reputable assayers to verify their previous assays which were taken at several locations and depths. All findings were independently verified and published. . . The assay results were very promising. . . the only problem was the samples were tampered with before they reached the point of analysis. At least that is what I have been led to believe since the price of the stock collapsed.

After I saw these "glowing" reports and watched the stock continue its upward momentum I decided to buy back in at $26 and soon after it passed $33-$34.

It was at this point the NASDAQ took DELGF off the trading floor as some of the data released by DELGF's management was not credible or could not be verified.

Darlene, what must be remembered is while DELGF is not the same as BCMD it is still human nature and only that which governs the price of anything. . . and that is the same.

Abraham Lincoln once said "What has once happened, will invariably happen again, when the same circumstances which combined to produce it, shall again combine in the same way."

The best we can do is compare our expectations to reality and reality is measured only by the physical evidence. So far I haven't seen any.

Eakole