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To: Patrick Slevin who wrote (9789)11/25/1997 12:22:00 AM
From: V.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 17305
 
Hey Pat,

This should help, just in case :]

bsee.swin.edu.au

Yeah, kids nowadays seem to be much farther along than we were at the same age... I know differential equations wasn't until 5th grade way back when I was in elementary school. ;)

We should take the rest of this discussion on "Schmucks in Vegas" to Rachel's Clubhouse, if that's ok with y'all. Don't wanna clutter the thread too much, and incidentally, where is Boi lately? <ggggg>

Thank you on the other stuff... :) I used to say, "Just Do It!", but the old gray mare ain't what she used to be, and so now I basically just try to stay above water. You are right, parenting is not an easy job by any stretch of the imagination...and, FWIW, there are probably some out there who might say that I am actually way beyond berserk already! Listen, crossing t's and dotting i's...don't sweat the small stuff, trust me.

Maybe things will go better for us all tomorrow if the Asian markets don't suffer tonight...DELL reported 3Q earnings of .69 vs .39 on revenues of 3.1B vs. 2B last year. Mean earnings estimate was .65, and '98 looks good according to Michael Dell...so that is encouraging news for the techs. Let's see how it pans out.

Over & out.

xoxo,
V.



To: Patrick Slevin who wrote (9789)11/25/1997 8:20:00 AM
From: Robert F. Newton  Respond to of 17305
 
Pacific Leaders Draft Asia Bailout

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) - Pacific Rim leaders put the finishing touches on an economic stabilization program for countries in trouble, hoping it will do what so far nothing has - calm the currency crisis sweeping Asia. The group was ready to endorse the ''Manila framework,'' a plan that gives primary responsibility for managing the crises to the International Monetary Fund but holds out the promise of back-up support from wealthy nations such as the United States and Japan. President Clinton made it clear that the United States had a lot at stake in putting an end to the turmoil, which has already triggered the biggest one-day point loss in Wall Street history.