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Strategies & Market Trends : Anthony @ Equity Investigations, Dear Anthony, -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Matthew Tyson who wrote (4331)1/15/1999 4:49:00 PM
From: campe  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
<g> ...

calsb.org



To: Matthew Tyson who wrote (4331)1/15/1999 5:01:00 PM
From: Anthony@Pacific  Respond to of 122087
 
Sorry Matt I forgot your online name is "4profit" not "paid4it"

thanks for correcting it ...



To: Matthew Tyson who wrote (4331)1/16/1999 7:30:00 AM
From: ztect  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 122087
 
Here's something almost as funny as little tony's legal dreams..

or wait to I forward a log of little tony's posts to DBC's attorneys (as well as to the SEC)...hope you're a much better defender than prosecutor....little tony [may] most likely will need the former rather than the latter. Plus have you seen the size of these complaints brought by companies against posters on internet threads. You should have told little tony not to use the word scam.

===========================
A Book Review

The Cat in the Hat by Dr. Seuss. 61 pages. Beginner Books. $3.95

The Cat in the Hat is a hard-hitting novel of prose and poetry in which
the author re-examines the dynamic rhyming schemes and bold imagery of
some of his earlier works, most notably Green Eggs and Ham, If I Ran the
Zoo, and Why Can't I Shower With Mommy? In this novel, Theodore Geisel,
writing under the pseudonym Dr. Seuss, pays homage to the great Dr.
Sigmund Freud in a nightmarish fantasy of a renegade feline helping two
young children understand their own frustrated sexuality.

The story opens with two youngsters, a brother and a sister, abandoned by
their mother, staring mournfully through the window of their
single-family dwelling. In the foreground, a large tree/phallic symbol
dances wildly in the wind, taunting the children and encouraging them to
succumb to the sexual yearnings they undoubtedly feel for each other.
Even to the most unlearned reader, the blatant references to the
incestuous relationship the two share set the tone for Seuss's probing
examination of the satisfaction of primitive needs. The Cat proceeds to
charm the wary youths into engaging in what he so innocently refers to as
"tricks." At this point, the fish, an obvious Christ figure who
represents the prevailing Christian morality, attempts to warn the
children, and thus, in effect, warns all of humanity of the dangers
associated with the unleashing of the primal urges. In response to this,
the cat proceeds to balance the aquatic naysayer on the end of his
umbrella, essentially saying, "Down with morality; down with God!"

After poohpoohing the righteous rantings of the waterlogged Christ
figure, the Cat begins to juggle several icons of Western culture, most
notably two books, representing the Old and New Testaments, and a saucer
of lactal fluid, an ironic reference to maternal loss the two children
experienced when their mother abandoned them "for the afternoon." Our
heroic Id adds to this bold gesture a rake and a toy man, and thus
completes the Oedipal triangle.

Later in the novel, Seuss introduces the proverbial Pandora's box, a
large red crate out of which the Id releases Thing One, or Freud's
concept of Ego, the division of the psyche that serves as the conscious mediator between the person and reality, and Thing Two, the Superego.