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Most definitely!...After what RH LORSH did for the roll-out of Microsoft Windows, the marketing here will be re$ult$ oriented.
FVRL is a great $$$$$ opportunity.
I have been adding more shares almost daily.
The FVRL train is still in the station.
Maybe we will see $10.00/share within the next 24 months.
Disiplined longs will hold most of their shares for the upside run. Traders will make fast money.
ROFLMAO............He went to the local technical college, signed up for evening classes, attended diligently, and learned all he could.
When the time of the practical exam approached, the gynecologist prepared carefully for weeks, and completed the exam with tremendous skill.
When the results came back, he was surprised to find that he had obtained a score of 150%.
Fearing an error, he called the instructor, saying, "I don't want to appear ungrateful for such an outstanding result, but I wonder if there is an error in the grade."
The instructor said, "During the exam, you took the engine apart perfectly, which was worth 50% of the total mark. You put the engine back together again perfectly, which is also worth 50% of the mark."
After a pause, the instructor added, "I gave you an extra 50% because you did it all through the muffler, which I've never seen done in my entire career"
Nice find Rain! This is huge news,
along with the upcoming merger that will continue
the ongoing upside of FVRL shareprice.
I can see GOOG & FVRL having healthy upside runs.
GOOG & FVRL are great $$$$$ opportunities.
Google, MyMedicalRecords.com Team
MyMedicalRecords.com collaborates with Google on personal health records
March, 2008
LOS ANGELES -- MyMedicalRecords.com, Inc. ("MMR"), a leading provider of Web-based Personal Health Records ("PHRs"), announced that it will be integrating with the Google Health platform, which is expected to be launched later this year.
Google's CEO, Eric Schmidt, previewed Google Health at the annual conference of the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) held last month. The company also announced that it is testing the Google Health product in a pilot program with the Cleveland Clinic. MyMedicalRecords.com is collaborating with Google Health to build a two-way interface that will enable users of Google Health to transfer information from their Google Health account into an MMR account and vice versa.
MMR is a highly-secure, easy-to-use, and comprehensive personal health record (PHR) that uses proprietary, patent-pending technology to give patients and healthcare providers the ability to upload images, such as x-rays, CT scans, and MRIs, fax medical records and other important documents, and to have doctors' notes dictated into an account. The information is then accessible from any Internet-connected computer anywhere in the world with no special hardware or software. An Emergency Login feature enables an Emergency Medical Provider to access important information in the event of a medical emergency.
"Once launched to the public, we believe Google Health will enable healthcare providers and patients to share vital information," said Robert H. Lorsch, CEO of MyMedicalRecords.com. "We are excited to have the opportunity to integrate with Google Health and look forward to individuals using MyMedicalRecords.com in conjunction with all the features and benefits of Google Health."
Google (Nasdaq: GOOG)
I can see her doing a reverse merger on the pink sheets....LOL.
Wall Street’s Sick Psychology of Entitlement
Posted Jan 22, 2009 10:12pm EST by John Carney in Banking
Related: BAC, JPM, MS, GS, XLF, C
From Clusterstock.com
The news that Merrill Lynch paid out $15 billion in bonuses is sure to ignite new questions about the wisdom of bailing out Wall Street. Merrill Lynch took $10 billion from the TARP, allegedly to fill holes in its balance sheet. But instead of using that to repair its financial health, it simply put the money into the pockets of its employees. There is no way to defend this disgusting payout.
But that won’t stop Bank of America, which now owns Merrill, from defending the bonuses. And across Wall Street there are lots of people who actually believe that Merrill did the right thing.
How can so many smart people be so dumb?
Easily. There is a sick psychology of entitlement on Wall Street that was created during the bubble years. Many simply cannot believe that they do not deserve huge pay packages. Their brains have no caught up with the idea that they are working in broken institutions that would be unable to pay to keep the lights on if not for the fact that Washington has given them billions of taxpayer dollars.
Of course, smart people are very good at rationalizing their fantasies, especially when the fantasy serves to make them money. There are three rationales they’ll offer when pressed on this. Each one is easily skewered.
"We made money. It was just one part of the firm that lost it all. So we deserve to be paid." Sorry, buddy. That’s not the way capitalism works. Ask the guy who just lost his job installing seat belts in GM cars. He was really good at that but since no one is buying those cars, he’s out of a job. Being really good at what you do doesn’t matter if your firm is broke—and your firm is broke. It’s now on taxpayer supported life-support.
"We didn’t use taxpayer money to pay the bonuses." This is the most ridiculous idea ever. Money is fungible. If you use billions to pay bonuses and then need to ask the government for money to stay alive, you are using taxpayer money to fill in the hole you dug by paying the bonuses.
"We’ll lose all the greatest people if we don’t pay them." Oh really? Where will they go? Who, exactly, is going to hire them? Also: so what? That’s how capitalism works. Failing firms that cannot afford to pay for talent lose that talent to successful firms. That’s an important part of market discipline.
"If we don't pay bonuses when firms take the TARP, they won't take it." This is the most sophisticated argument for huge bonuses. In Germany, this actually happened. As it turns out, executives would rather risk their firm collapsing due to lack of capital than give up their big paydays. But there's an easy solution to this: throw the bastards out. The boards of every single financial company that turned down bailout bucks with a bonus limit cuuld demand a full accounting of why a bank's executives think it is healthy enough to forego a bailout. And if they aren't satisfied they should just fire the management.
Look. We’re not hysterical opponents of paying big bonuses. Actually, I'm on the record as defending huge bonuses from a couple of years ago. If your firm makes money, it can decide how to reward its employees. If it loses money, it can still decide to pay bonuses if it still has cash on hand. But when you pay yourself a bonus with taxpayer money you are simply taking money from someone who earned it and giving it to someone who didn't. If the government hadn’t supplied the means for redistributing that money, you’d just be a mugger.
It was only a few months ago that we were being told that Merrill Lynch, among others, desperately needed billions of dollars to survive, that without injections of new capital the financial system would come crashing down around us. If any of this was true, it should have been impossible for Merrill to pay out $15 billion in bonuses. Even the sharpest critics of the bailout never imagined that it would be used to make wealthy idiots even wealthier.
All of this is a reminder of why it is very, very dangerous to allow the government to rescue firms instead of allowing the market to decide who should survive. Perhaps instead of a bailout, we should have confined the TARP to overseeing the orderly disolution of failed financial institutions.
$1.2 Million Spent to Redecorate Thain's Office
Posted Jan 22, 2009 12:22pm EST by Joe Weisenthal in Investing, Newsmakers, Banking
Related: BAC, MER, ^DJI
From Clusterstock , Jan. 22, 2009:
Didn't someone go to jail for spending too much on a shower curtain?
Amidst everything else going on at Bank of America (BAC) and its boneheaded decision to buy dying Merrill Lynch, Charlie Gasparino reports, for the Daily Beast, that John Thain had a ridiculous amount spent on his own perks, including a redecorating of his office.
According to documents reviewed by The Daily Beast, Thain spent $1.22 million of company money to refurbish his office at Merrill Lynch headquarters in lower Manhattan. The biggest piece of the spending spree: $800,000 to hire famed celebrity designer Michael Smith, who is currently redesigning the White House for the Obama family for just $100,000.
The other big ticket items Thain purchased include: $87,000 for an area rug in Thain's conference room and another area rug for $44,000; a "mahogany pedestal table" for $25,000; a "19th Century Credenza" in Thain's office for $68,000; a sofa for $15,000; four pairs curtains for $28,000; a pair of guest chairs for $87,000; a "George IV Desk" for $18,000; 6 wall sconces for $2,700; six chairs in his private dining room for $37,000; a mirror in his private dining room for $5,000; a chandelier in the private dining room for $13,000; fabric for a "Roman Shade" for $11,000; a "custom coffee table" for $16,000; something called a "commode on legs" for $35,000; a "Regency Chairs" for $24,000; "40 yards of farbric for wall panels," for $5,000 and a "parchment waste can" for $1,400.
And here's Charlie's latest from CNBC on the Thain firing:
CNBC HAS LEARNED THAT KEN LEWIS, THE CEO OF B OF A A GOING TO MEET WITH JOHN THAIN LATER THIS AFTERNOON. I HEAR AROUND 11:30, ESSENTIALLY TO DECIDE HIS FUTURE.IT'S BEEN A CRAZY COUPLE WEEKS AT MERRILL LYNCH. EXECUTIVE DEPARTURES, PEOPLE LEAVING, BLAMING, SAYING THEY CAN'T GET ALONG WITH THAIN. AND THEN THAT SURPRISE LOSS, $15 BILLION. THAT ALMOST TANKED THE B OF A/MERRILL DEAL.
KEN LEWIS IS MEETING WITH THAIN. I'M NOT SAYING HE'S DONE YET, BUT FROM WHAT I UNDERSTAND, INSIDE MERRILL PEOPLE ARE TELLING ME THIS IS THE MEETING WHERE THAIN'S FUTURE IS GOING TO BE DECIDED. AND THE LIKELIHOOD RIGHT NOW IS THAT HE'S OUT, THAT LEWIS IS GOING TO BREAK THE NEWS TO HIM. LEWIS FELT COMPLETELY BLINDSIDED BY THAT $15 BILLION OF BLOS.
HE'S TAKEN A LOT OF HEAT. PEOPLE SAY HE SHOULD HAVE DONE BETTER DUE DILIGENCE. THEY PAID $28 BILLION, AND THEN ALL OF A SUDDEN THIS SURPRISE
LOSS COMES OUT, $15 BILLION DISCLOSED LAST WEEK, AND THAT NEARLY TANKS THE DEAL.THEY HAVE TO GO TO THE GOVERNMENT, AND FROM WHAT I UNDERSTAND LEWIS IS PERSONALLY BLAMING THAIN FOR MAYBE NOT BEING COMPLETELY FORTHCOMING WITH HIM. WE WILL KNOW IF HE'S AT THE FIRM FOR A WHILE OR OUT TODAY.
IF HE'S NOT GONE TODAY, GUYS, I'LL TELL YOU, IF LEWIS HAS NOT DECIDED HE'S GONE JUST YET, AFTER I REPORT WHAT I'M GOING TO REPORT, HE MAY GO.
JOHN THAIN REDID HIS OFFICE WHEN HE CAME INTO BE THE CEO OF MERRILL LYNCH SOMETIME IN JANUARY OR FEBRUARY OF LAST YEAR. HE SPENT $1.22 MILLION REDESIGNING THIS THING, AND HERE IS WHAT'S INTERESTING. CNBC HAS OBTAINED DOCUMENTS WHICH KIND OF BREAK DOWN THE COSTS. HE SPENT $837,000 ON SOME GUY NAMED MICHAEL SMITH, WHO IS ALSO MICHELLE OBAMA'S INTERIOR DIRECTOR. THE WHITE HOUSE IS PAYING HIM 100K. HE SPENT $87,000 FOR AN AREA RUG. A MAHOGANY PEDESTAL TABLE FOR $25,000. A 19th CENTURY CREDENZA FOR $68,000. PENDANT LIGHT FURNITURE FOR $19,000. FOUR PAIRS OF CURTAINS FOR $28,000. A PAIR OF GUEST CHAIRS, $88,000, A GEORGE IV GUEST CHAIR FOR $18,000, SIX WALL SCONCES FOR $2,700 AND A MARCHMENT WASTE CAN FOR $1,400. HE ALSO SPENT MONEY ON ROMAN SHADE FABRIC, A LITTLE OVER $10,000. ROMAN SHADE, $7,000, COFFEE TABLE FOR $5,852 AND THIS IS ONE I DON’T UNDERSTAND, A COMMODE ON LEGS FOR $35,115. DOCUMENTS ALSO SHOW HE SIGNED OFF ON THE PURCHASES PERSONALLY AND THAT HE USED ANOTHER $5,000 -- NOT FIVE, ANOTHER
$30,000 TO PAY THE EXPENSES MR. SMITH INCURRED IN DOING HIS WORK. THAIN HAS ALSO HIRED SMITH, WHOSE CELEBRITY LIST INCLUDES STEVEN SPIELBERG, CINDY CRAWFORD, TO DESIGN HIS MANHATTAN APARTMENT AT 740 PARK AVENUE AND HIS 14-BEDROOM HOME IN RYE, N.Y.
OTHER DOCUMENTS SHOW THAIN PAID HIS DRIVER LAST YEAR $230,000, WHICH INCLUDED THE DRIVER'S $85,000 SALARY AND A BONUS OF $18,000 AND ANOTHER $20,000 OVERTIME PAY. DRIVERS OF TOP EXECUTIVES ARE OFTEN PAID ABOUT HALF OF THAT AMOUNT. YOU KNOW, MERRILL LYNCH SPOKESMAN HAD NO COMMENT ON THIS.
For more news, go to Clusterstock.
LOL ..."DITTO" on that junk stock...bouuyyahhh!!!!!
FVRL is where it is at.>> $$$$$.
FVRL is a great $$$$$ opportunity.
As Sarah Palin would say: " You betcha! "
FVRL is a great $$$$$ opportunity.
In bad times, Vegas casinos know when to hold 'em
Tuesday January 20, 5:14 pm ET
By Oskar Garcia, Associated Press Writer
Facing bad odds, Las Vegas casino companies play the cards they are dealt
LAS VEGAS (AP) -- Major gambling companies' ledgers have told the same, sinking story for a year: Fewer people are visiting casinos, their trips are getting shorter and they're not gambling as much.
Casino construction has slowed or halted from one end of the Las Vegas Strip to the other, more than a dozen projects across the U.S. and abroad have been modified or dropped, and more than 40,000 new rooms in Las Vegas planned by some of the industry's biggest players are on hold.
Among other bids to entice customers in the lagging economy, casinos across the country also have slashed room rates. But executives are heralding bigger changes than two-for-one deals on rooms as a decade of rapid revenue growth based on physical expansion and easy credit has stopped short.
Industry leaders are following the widespread layoffs, debt reduction and other cost cutting of recent months with calls for innovation and a back-to-basics approach that focuses on delivering a quality at good prices.
Most casino markets in the United States already are saturated, said Jonathan Halkyard, chief financial officer for Harrah's Entertainment Inc., and operators have to start thinking beyond their next construction project while the economy retrenches, he said.
MGM Mirage Inc. chief executive Jim Murren said he's seeing small signs that travelers are opening up to Las Vegas again, but not enough to predict when a recovery might happen.
"We have a consumer that is not confident, that has been scared, and has every reason to be scared," said Murren, whose company has more casinos on the Las Vegas Strip than any other.
The world's four largest casino operators -- MGM Mirage, Harrah's, Las Vegas Sands Corp. and Wynn Resorts Ltd., all based in Las Vegas -- are preparing to play the hands they have. There are no new plans afoot for new flourishes like the multimillion-dollar volcanoes or fountains that already grace the Strip or for expensive new clubs or hotels built substantially on credit.
"The executives' optimism is shaking," said David Schwartz, director of the Center for Gaming Research at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
Gambling revenue for commercial casinos across the U.S. dropped $1.1 billion, or 3.6 percent, to $30.2 billion in the first 11 months of 2008 compared with the same period in 2007, according to the American Gaming Association. Many states saw much more dramatic drops, except Pennsylvania, where casino gambling began only in 2007. The figures include only private gambling operations and not, for example, casinos owned by Indian tribes, which also have seen revenue tumble and some of which have cut staff and other costs in response.
In Macau, a Chinese enclave hailed as the next Las Vegas, American casino companies have been cutting table games and slot machines to cope with tightened Chinese visa rules and the recession, said gambling analyst Celeste Mellet Brown of Morgan Stanley Research. Revenue fell 2 percent for the fourth quarter in Macau, Brown said.
Visitor volume in Las Vegas declined 3.8 percent for the first 11 months of 2008 compared with 2007 -- meaning 1 million fewer people showed up to gamble, shop and dine out -- and revenue here dropped 9.3 percent, according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority.
Wynn Resorts was the only operator among the four largest that saw growth between the first three quarters of 2007 and the same period in 2008: Its net income rose 92 percent to $369.8 million from $192.7 million.
Las Vegas Sands and Harrah's each lost money during the first nine months of 2008, while MGM Mirage's profit plunged. Sands lost $52.2 million from January through September 2008, after earning $76.8 million for same three quarters in 2007. Harrah's lost $415.1 million in the period in 2008 after earning $667.2 million in 2007.
MGM Mirage earned $292.7 million, down nearly 59 percent from $712.21 in the period in 2007, creating some uncertainty, especially in Las Vegas. Murren said he told 2,700 casino managers during two meetings last week that he didn't know if his company would trim more workers -- it has laid off 3,200 since October 2007 -- or sell other casinos. It recently sold the Treasure Island for $775 million. He also told the managers MGM Mirage may sell noncore assets, including two airplanes and nearly 300 acres of land in Nevada and Atlantic City, N.J., he told The Associated Press.
"If the market doesn't grow, it's going to be a market share discussion," Murren said in an interview.
The company must stay its course by finishing CityCenter, its $8.6 billion project on the Strip, he said. But, instead of borrowing more and spending more, the company is exploring a half-dozen deals around the world in which it will lend out its name and expertise, he said.
"We have vastly under-leveraged brands," Murren said. "Who does not know Bellagio, and yet there's only one Bellagio? And MGM is one of the most recognized brands in the world -- a lot of people still think we make movies -- and how do you not try to leverage that?"
That sentiment is reverberating through the industry.
"Here's an idea: How about innovation? I mean if you look at the slot machine, it's basically the same as it was 75 years ago," said Halkyard, the CFO at Harrah's, the world's largest gambling company by revenue.
"There has been a shocking lack of innovation around our core product in this industry when compared to virtually any other consumer entertainment product over decades," Halkyard told the AP.
Last week, the privately held company -- which owns or manages 50 casinos in six countries, including 20,000 rooms in Las Vegas alone -- said it would wait for demand to pick up before it finishes more than 600 new rooms at its flagship Caesars Palace on the Strip. Harrah's has been restructuring its debt and in November withdrew a proposal made with partners to manage a $535 million state-owned casino in Kansas.
Instead, Halkyard said the company is experimenting with ideas like sending guests same-day specials at shows, restaurants and clubs by text message.
"Once people are here, it is fierce competition for their attention," Halkyard said.
Sands' president and chief operating officer, William Weidner, said at a conference this month that his company's strategy is not changing much, however, in the hope that it can take quick advantage when the economy rebounds.
"But again, we are very mindful of the degree of difficulty," Weidner said. "We're very mindful of how difficult '09 is going to be, and we're focused on operating through '09 as we get into '10."
Sands is working to finish developments on time and on budget, he said.
Anthony Marnell III, chairman and CEO of the $1 billion M Resort, Spa and Casino to open in March south of the main resort corridor in Las Vegas, said times may have changed forever.
"Two years ago, you didn't have to differentiate yourself -- you could just build a nice, big, brand new building and put a good product out there, and you could charge just about what you wanted for it, and people would pay it and keep coming back for more," Marnell said.
Marnell said fewer consumers will tolerate $15 martinis, $50 filets and $2,000 booths in nightclubs.
"The masses ... they're done with it," Marnell said. "They are going to stay retracted and conscious of their dollars for a long time."
Billionaire Steve Wynn's resorts -- including the Wynn Las Vegas, Wynn Macau and Encore in Las Vegas -- cater to customers used to expensive drinks. But the Wynn CEO said casino operators run smoothest when they plan prudently.
"There's nothing up our sleeves here -- this is just common sense," he told the AP when Wynn opened Encore in December in Las Vegas. He expects to open a $700 million Encore resort in Macau by the end of this year.
"Whether you're talking about the capital structure of the company (or) the way the employees are treated, all that results in the guests being able to trust us to be the same this month and next month," he said. "If we can do a good job opening week, when everything is on trial, then sure as hell we're going to be dandy six months from now."
Probably signed a confidentiality contract.
Smart Joe!.....another avenue for DD.
They deal with many of the fortune 500 companies.
What lead you to believe Prarie is working with this small micro-cap?
Man - O - man! ..FVRL is gangbuster city.
Solid upside in progress.
FVRL closed up 30% today. GANGBUSTERS is
the only description of the amount of excellent DD on the FVRL board. SOLID UPSIDE IN PROGRESS!
I am with you Berry.....waiting for news.
Actually I bought at .093
...just revisited my limit order.
At opening bell( before hurricane hit ...LOL )
I was able to get another 15K of FVRL shares at .091/share....very fortunate to get these last few shares under .10/share.
LOL.....Unfortunately, you are probably right.
Maybe FEMA should look at these for temp. emergency shelter.
Let's hope the auditors are on schedule.
Potential of completed merger this week or next week should give us a nice upside "pop".
"As we had announced earlier this month, two significant conditions for closing the merger, MMR's stockholder vote and settlement with creditors holding more than 85% of the dollar value of all of Favrille's known creditor claims, have been accomplished," said John P. Longenecker, President and CEO of Favrille. "We are now pleased to announce that a third significant condition, completion of the audit of MMR's financial statements for the years ended 2005 through 2007 is well underway with completion expected in early January. We anticipate closing the transaction in January 2009."
LOL...That is Jay Leno material.
Just as funny looking at it a 2nd time!
I am buying more FVRL shares on Tuesday.
There isn't a better microcap out there..imho.
FVRL is a great $$$$$ opportunity.
I wouldn't be suprised if we don't have a 2-3 bagger right after Obama's inaugaration.
With all the solid research from you, rain, joe, ely, and others, each day I feel like I do not own enough shares...LOL.
It looks like we have a rising plume of smoke on the FVRL launch pad.
I am placing another limit order on Tuesday....this is an exciting stock to own.
Ely,...Good statistics on MAYO!
also costs vs. savings and benefits:
"Mayo won’t say exactly how much it spent, but I estimate that the Rochester facility’s system cost around $80 million over 10 years. What does the clinic get in return? Cost savings of about $35 million to $40 million annually, primarily from the elimination of administrative overhead such as record-keeping staff, and other benefits including improved quality of care."
No wonder Obama wants 50-billion dollars over 5 years...the start-up costs are huge for these medical centers; FVRL has the most cost-efficient system availsble today...imho.
Actual Medical Records.....LOL
The following quotes were taken from actual medical records dictated by physicians. They appeared in a column written by Richard Lederer, Ph.D. for the Journal of Court Reporting.
1. By the time he was admitted, his rapid heart had stopped, and he was feeling better.
2. Patient has chest pain if she lies on her left side for over a year.
3. On the second day the knee was better and on the third day it had completely disappeared.
4. She has had no rigors or shaking chills, but her husband states she was very hot in bed last night.
5. The patient has been depressed ever since she began seeing me in 1983.
6. I will be happy to go into her GI system; she seems ready and anxious.
7. Patient was released to outpatient department without dressing. I have suggested that he loosen his pants before standing, and then, when he stands with the help of his wife, they should fall to the floor.
8. The patient is tearful and crying constantly. She also appears to be depressed.
9. Discharge status: Alive but without permission. The patient will need disposition, and therefore we will get Dr. Blank to dispose of him.
10. Healthy appearing decrepit 69 year-old male, mentally alert but forgetful.
11. The patient refused an autopsy.
12. The patient has no past history of suicides.
13. The patient expired on the floor uneventfully.
14. Patient has left his white blood cells at another hospital.
15. Patient was becoming more demented with urinary frequency.
16. The patient's past medical history has been remarkably insignificant with only a 40 pound weight gain in the past three days.
17. She slipped on the ice and apparently her legs went in separate directions in early December.
18. The patient left the hospital feeling much better except for her original complaints.
Weekend Humor...Medical Record Blunders:
Medical Record Blunders:
The skin was moist and dry.
Rectal exam revealed a normal size thyroid. (Long fingers?)
The patient had waffles for breakfast and anorexia for lunch.
She stated that she had been constipated for most of her life until 1989 when she got a divorce.
Between you and me, we ought to be able to get this lady pregnant.
The patient was in his usual state of good health until his airplane ran out of gas and crashed.
The lab test indicated abnormal lover function.
The baby was delivered, the cord clamped and cut, and handed to the pediatrician, who breathed and cried immediately.
Exam of genitalia reveals that he is circus sized.
I saw your patient today, who is still under our car for physical therapy.
The patient lives at home with his mother, father, and pet turtle, who is presently enrolled in day care three times a week.
Bleeding started in the rectal area and continued all the way to Los Angeles.
Both breasts are equal and reactive to light and accommodation. (Excuse me, what are you doing with that pen light?)
She is numb from her toes down.
Exam of genitalia was completely negative except for the right foot. (Anatomy review time!)
While in the emergency room, she was examined, X-rated and sent home.
The patient was to have a bowel resection. However, he took a job as a stockbroker instead. (An empowered patient.)
The patient suffers from occasional, constant, infrequent headaches.
Coming from Detroit, this man has no children.
Examination reveals a well-developed male lying in bed with his family in no distress.
Patient was alert and unresponsive.
When she fainted, her eyes rolled around the room.
We will follow her eyes and nose with a foley catheter.
By the time he was admitted, his rapid heart had stopped, and he was feeling better.
Patient has chest pain if she lies on her left side for over a year.
On the second day the knee was better and on the third day it had completely disappeared.
The patient has been depressed ever since she began seeing me in 1983.
The patient is tearful and crying constantly. She also appears to be depressed.
Discharge status: Alive but without permission.
Healthy-appearing decrepit sixty-nine-year-old male, mentally alert but forgetful.
The patient refused an autopsy.
The patient expired on the floor uneventfully.
Patient has left his white blood cells at another hospital.
The patient's past medical history has been remarkably insignificant, with only a forty-pound weight gain in the past three days.
She slipped on the ice and apparently her legs went in separate directions in early December.
The patient had a rash over his truck.
Dictation blunder: lasar radar response (as opposed to vagovagal response).
Budget, I bought some of your CRYP
with a limit order today - $3.56/share
I like the upside potential.
Up 61% today.....BioWillie biodiesel:
Earth Biofuels has attracted support from two high-profile individuals: Oscar-winning actor Morgan Freeman and country music legend Willie Nelson. Because of their shared passion for promoting the use of clean-burning domestically produced fuels, both men joined the company as spokesmen for the company. Morgan Freeman also serves on the Board of Directors. Earth Biofuels acquired the exclusive license to sell and distribute Willie Nelson’s BioWillie biodiesel. BioWillie is the first branded biodiesel fuel in the United States and gained national attention and support throughout the country from truckers and even mainstream consumers largely due to Willie's tremendous fan base. The company went public in October 2005 on the Over The Counter Bulletin Board exchange under the ticker symbol EBOF, thereby becoming one of the first publicly traded biodiesel companies in the United States.
Also FVRL is on Buzz Cloud:
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/tcloud.aspx
A ton of DD here like you say.
Thanks to many posters here, it really saves me time, with all the work I have on my job......No time for me this week to invest/trade stocks....Just enough time to buy FVRL & ZLNK at end of each session.
Berry, that is the exact price I paid with my Bank of America account.
I will round it out to .09 >> LOL.
Boardmarks now 84 up from
75 this time yesterday.
I'm helping the cause. Just bought more shares at .0913
I love the upside potential here.
Smart man! Solid interview!>>>$$$$$.
Joe a personmark for you. I am buying a small portion of those tute shares...GLTY and thanks for the DD.
Nice Report Joe! I'm glad I have been accumulating.
FVRL is a great $$$$$ opportunity.