[3831] in SIPB IPv6

home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post

I has made it.

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Carlos Abernathy)
Tue Oct 31 23:22:37 2006

From: "Carlos Abernathy" <deborahpfwsmu01nzc@caimacel.com>
To: <singsingsing@mit.edu>
Date: Wed, 1 Nov 2006 04:22:23 -0540

In business theres no word more powerful than the word.  And what 
is the word?  P-R-O-F-I-T!!!  And thats what our next feature is all 
about.

EverGlory International (EGLY) is involved in one of the most lucrative 
areas of business these days, production in China. Quarter after quarter 
they get to use the word in BIG ways!  Some recent quarterly postings:

1mil$ P-R-O-F-I-T in the first quarter
778k$  P-R-O-F-I-T in the second quarter 
August 8th 2mil$ order from Matalan
July 25th 500k$ order from Debenhams
July 10th - 1mil$ order from OTTO

Please check all these figures with your favorite source.  EGLY is the real 
deal!  We are expecting third quarter numbers to be out soon and are 
telling all of our members to take a position in EGLY before the data is 
out.  These fortuitous figures are going to shock the market and send this 
one way up!

Current: 0.68
Projected: 1.30
Rating: 5/5
Inve st date: Wednesday, 1 oct 2006.
Call your broker now.
Give yourself the chance to come out WAY ahead here.  Fortune favors 
the bold!
--
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Soaring crude prices may have prompted oil companies to venture into ever hostile terrain to bring supplies to market, yet by one account all the spending may merely serve to hold production levels constant.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- If you're Happy and you know it, pat your head. That, in a peanut shell, is how a 34-year-old female Asian elephant in the Bronx Zoo showed researchers that pachyderms can recognize themselves in a mirror -- complex behavior observed in only a few other species.
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The threat to Big Pharma is real - the nation's drugmakers stand to lose nearly seven percent of their sales to drugs going off patent this year - and more CEOs who don't get ahead of the problem could end up losing their jobs.
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Increased pay and falling gas prices helped put more money into consumers' pockets in September, but they didn't rush to stores to spend that money, according to a government report Monday.



home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post