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GM mojo and All.
Question to anyone: Is asapr responsible for releasing news? Does the company place complete control over the firm for PR biz?
A simple moving average is formed by computing the average (mean) price of a security over a specified number of periods. While it is possible to create moving averages from the Open, the High, and the Low data points, most moving averages are created using the closing price. For example: a 5-day simple moving average is calculated by adding the closing prices for the last 5 days and dividing the total by 5.
10+ 11 + 12 + 13 + 14 = 60
(60 / 5) = 12
The calculation is repeated for each price bar on the chart. The averages are then joined to form a smooth curving line - the moving average line. Continuing our example, if the next closing price in the average is 15, then this new period would be added and the oldest day, which is 10, would be dropped. The new 5-day simple moving average would be calculated as follows:
11 + 12 + 13 + 14 +15 = 65
(65 / 5) = 13
Over the last 2 days, the SMA moved from 12 to 13. As new days are added, the old days will be subtracted and the moving average will continue to move over time.
In the example above, using closing prices from Eastman Kodak (EK), day 10 is the first day possible to calculate a 10-day simple moving average. As the calculation continues, the newest day is added and the oldest day is subtracted. The 10-day SMA for day 11 is calculated by adding the prices of day 2 through day 11 and dividing by 10. The averaging process then moves on to the next day where the 10-day SMA for day 12 is calculated by adding the prices of day 3 through day 12 and dividing by 10.
Good Job...today!
Lurk ON !
Sometimes I Slap myself Silly !!!! LMAO
Go ETIM'ers !!! Hurry !!
You go gutsy22 ! Slap ON !~ I am temporarily Slapped all over the place !!! price point wise LOL~~
Too Much SD Sun...LOL
Well except for that 1 share I have for Sparks. If we get the PR today...lol
that senitment works for me. I sure wouldn't let loose of a single share...not ONE !!! They're not for sale!
I'll wire you a share ! lol But I'll take dibs on a Wednesday PR on new distributor license. (2 shares)
So why do they hold it down? It seems chincy to me when we belong at 80 with as much money that we have all spent ! IMo
That Intra day chart is so typical...HOD EOD duhhhh!!
Glad I'm not flipping
GO Long
Okay, LETS GO, ROCK AND ROLL ENOUGH MESSIN AROUND! RA Ra mm'S. gET IT together make some noise ! EI: Break one off ! Bust loose a little. Do the Wave ! Get this party started! People in the stands...StOMP your FEET !! Slap that A$K !
There I feel better..lol
[())) (Bell helmet with the EI4X chin strap)
I'll say it for ya.....SLAP THAT A$K !!!!
GM Basser. Go ETIM, and for you Go Yanks! For me Go Dodgers ! LOL Check out this little read.. iknowa.
05/01/2007 8:23 PM ET
'Final Season' should be memorable
Iowa is scene of latest movie about national pastime
By Mark Newman / MLB.com
"Ask yourself one question: How do you want to be remembered?"
That time-honored question asked by actor Sean Astin's coaching character Kent Stock is at the core of the charming new movie, "The Final Season." Now we will just have to watch and decide for ourselves whether the second baseball-themed major motion picture from Iowa will be remembered as well as the first.
It has been more than two decades since "Field of Dreams" was shot there amongst the hallowed cornfields of tiny Dyersville, and for all we know that line of tourists' automobile headlights is still stretching across the land. Oh, the people definitely came. And they still talk about that one as one of the best sports movies ever.
This new movie premiered April 28 at the TriBeCa Film Festival in New York and is directed by David Mickey Evans of "Sandlot" fame, and in this one the sport and the state are the only real similarities. It is about a little town called Norway (enrollment barely 100) and its real-life 1991 high school baseball team. Amazingly, this school had produced 19 state champions, consistently beating larger schools, and a mecca for scouts. Nearly half of Norway's baseball players went on to college ball, and of those, 16 made it to the Majors. But that '91 season was the last because of school consolidations, and let's just say that these guys went out in style.
In fact, if you are going to compare "The Final Season" to any sports movie, then it is a lot closer to "Hoosiers" than to "Field of Dreams." The final sentence of the synopsis on the movie's Web site even says: "The Final Season is destined to be baseball's version of 'Hoosiers'."
Indeed, it is practically "Hoosiers" with a smaller ball. The storylines, characters, cinematography and non-fiction background are all eerily similar -- and it even ends in identical fashion, with the final camera shot zooming dramatically to a black-and-white team photo of the state high school champions that a small town could never, ever forget. There is a player's bedridden father who is the virtual equivalent of Dennis Hopper's character in "Hoosiers," there is a love story between a coach (Astin) and an initially disagreeable brunette (Rachael Leigh Cook), there is a town meeting (only it's Powers Boothe instead of Gene Hackman speaking up), and there is Boothe's legendary character Jim Van Scoyoc who says: "Eighty percent of this game is defense."
So how do you know when you have made a truly memorable baseball movie, such as "Sandlot"?
"You don't know," said Evans, part of the movie's delegation that visited the MLB.com studios in New York on Friday. "It's a weird thing. You don't know until many years later that it has become remembered in that way. 'Sandlot' is still selling 40,000 to 50,000 DVDs a month, and by now, my guess-timation is that there have been 11 to 12 million DVDs sold. It just became a beloved classic -- like 'The Christmas Story.' People say, 'You gotta see this movie.'
"I think that people are going to be emotionally moved at the end of 'The Final Season.' It's a bit bittersweet, but they'll leave with a sense of triumph. They'll leave with a reminder that people can overcome big odds and do something special."
Here is what you are going to absolutely love about "The Final Season":
• The train. It is the runaway star of this movie. No offense to the actors. But it's always there. It rumbles in the background as the Astin and Cook characters play catch. It rumbles beyond the outfield fence during the championship game. It is the mystique, with a legend attached that talks about the longest home run in baseball history. You'll just have to watch it yourself to find out how far it went.
• The lines. What's a memorable baseball/sports movie without great lines you never forget? "You know," Boothe's character says, "those old-timers say that baseball is the only game on earth where the object is to get home, kid." Or when he is replaced as coach and looks out his garage to the adjacent field where all those titles were celebrated, and his wife says, "It's OK to miss it." He replies: "It'd be a whole lot easier if that field was a thousand miles away."
• The infield practice. There are millions of baseball fans who probably would appreciate this part of the movie. Imagine the "perfect" infield session right before a game, lasting a precise eight minutes, 50 seconds, where every throw was on the money, as crisp as can be. "Infield" was a big-time highlight, and you will want to compare the first one with the second one during the movie.
"I'm from Norway, and played on three state championship teams and it was a wonderful experience. I haven't (seen the movie), but can't wait to," Randy Walter said in an e-mail to MLB.com after the trailer and interviews were posted here. "My brother was a first team All-State pitcher on that '91 team that the movie was made about. We all followed that season very close and it was heartbreaking to see the dynasty die.
"This movie portrays things very well. I remember my senior season and we took the infield before the state championship game and it was absolutely flawless. ... We did that and it had to be intimidating to the other team. I played in the early '80s and we went on a big roll then. The key part of Norway baseball is that we only scheduled the biggest schools and still beat them all the time. We stayed out of a conference so we wouldn't have to play the small schools. My senior year, the 4A state champs were swept by us during the year."
• The relationship between the troubled teen (whose obsessively busy single dad is played by Tom Arnold) and his grandfather.
• The city signs while the state championship is being played. Like the one outside the local post office: "NOBODY'S GRANDMA DIED ... AT THE GAME."
• The first 10 minutes or so of this movie might seem almost nauseatingly happy to some, beginning with title No. 19. But the wait is worth it.
• The little batboy with the conscience -- seemingly pulled right out of "The Natural." We were waiting for him to bring someone the WonderBoy.
• The 95-mph intimidator for the last opponent. And the leaping Gary Matthews Jr.-style bringback catch.
• The fact that it's another potentially unforgettable baseball movie. There just aren't enough of them, which probably is why some are so special.
How will "The Final Season" be remembered? It will not only be up to those people who made it happen in real life 16 years ago. It will be up to movie-goers who gravitate toward surprises. Like "Sandlot." And "Hoosiers."
When they first met, Polly (Cook) asked Stock (Astin): "What is the big deal with the high school baseball team? I don't get it."
"Here's the thing you have to understand about Norway," he said. "It's like being with the New York Yankees. They have a tradition here that's about more than just winning. It's about playing the game right. I guess I just want some of that to rub off on me. Make any sense?"
Oh, yes. This movie will make a lot of sense to people around here. And maybe they will even come again to another Iowa baseball movie, more than two decades later.
Mark Newman is enterprise editor for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
I'll hold the door open..lol
Good Morning
October 26, 2006 - 9:00 AM EDT
Eternal Image Enters Into an Agreement for Auditing Services With Bouwhuis, Morrill & Company
Funerary Products Developer Plans Move to OTC Bulletin Board
Eternal Image, Inc. (PINKSHEETS: ETIM), a public company engaged in the design, manufacturing and marketing of customized designer caskets and urns, today announced it has retained the services of accounting firm Bouwhuis, Morrill & Company, LLC of Layton, Utah.
The accounting firm will perform an audit of Eternal Image, Inc.'s financial statements as it prepares to apply to the NASDAQ-operated Over the Counter (OTC) Bulletin Board.
"Completing an audit is the next step in our progression to the OTC Bulletin Board," said Clint Mytych, president of Eternal Image. "The audit, which should be completed in 6-8 weeks, will allow us to apply for a listing, making our stock more accessible to the public."
For more information about Eternal Image, visit www.EternalImage.net or call 1-888-6-CASKET.
SAFE HARBOR
Statements in this press release relating to plans, strategies, economic performance and trends, projections of results of specific activities or investments, and other statements that are not descriptions of historical facts may be forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Forward-looking information is inherently subject to risks and uncertainties, and actual results could differ materially from those currently anticipated due to a number of factors, which include but are not limited to, risk factors inherent in doing business. Forward-looking statements may be identified by terms such as "may," "will," "should," "could," "expects," "plans," "intends," "anticipates," "believes," "estimates," "predicts," forecasts," potential," or "continue," or similar terms or the negative of these terms.
Although we believe that the expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements are reasonable, we cannot guarantee future results, levels of activity, performance or achievements. The company has no obligation to update these forward-looking statements.
Source: Market Wire (October 26, 2006 - 9:00 AM EDT)
News by QuoteMedia
www.quotemedia.com
March 1, 2006 - 8:00 AM EST
CRLY 0.04 as of 5/1/07
Carley Enterprises Announces Agreement With Eternal Image, Inc.
Company Offers Designer Caskets and Urns
Carley Enterprises, Inc., (OTC: CRLY), a diversified holding company which assists emerging, revenue producing companies in their growth efforts, announced it entered into a consulting agreement with Eternal Image, Inc., (f/k/a Eternal Image, LLC) and assisted Eternal Image in its transition to an Over-the-Counter (OTC) public company. Eternal Image (OTC: ETIM) is trading under the symbol OTC Pinks: ETIM. Eternal Image produces and markets custom designer caskets and urns inspired by professional sports teams, automobile and motorcycle manufacturers, fashion designers and the entertainment industry.
Matthew Carley, CEO of Carley Enterprises, stated, "We are very pleased to be working with Eternal Image and assisting them in becoming a publicly traded company. We believe Eternal Image's unique and original products will create a whole new market segment in the funeral industry and will make Eternal Image a leader in the multi-billion dollar funeral and burial products market. Eternal Image is a perfect fit for Carley Enterprises' services and experience, and we appreciate and look forward to assisting with their growth efforts."
Carley Enterprises, Inc. seeks to acquire interests in emerging companies and assist the companies with their growth efforts. Carley Enterprises, Inc. also invests in companies and businesses in which it believes have growth and profit potential.
Forward-Looking Statements
Any statements made in this press release which are not historical facts contain certain "forward-looking statements," as such term is defined in the Private Litigation Reform Act of 1995, concerning potential developments affecting the business, prospects, financial condition and other aspects of the Company to which this release pertains. The actual results of the specific items described in this release, and the Company's operations generally, may differ materially from what is projected in such forward-looking statements. Although such statements are based upon the best judgment of management of the Company as of the date of this release, significant deviations in magnitude, timing and other factors may result from business risks and uncertainties, including, without limitation, the Company's dependence on third parties, general market and economic conditions, technical factors, the availability of outside capital, the receipt of revenues, and other factors, many of which are beyond the control of the Company.
All information in this release is as of the date of this release. The Company undertakes no duty to update any forward-looking statement to conform the statement to actual results or changes in the Company's expectations.
Source: Market Wire (March 1, 2006 - 8:00 AM EST)
News by QuoteMedia
www.quotemedia.com
Welcome geargeek!! Cool name.. You work on tranny's right...lol
AF= "Audited Financials" and in this case for 2004-2006.
....followed by the European Funeral Suppliers and Distributors licencing agreements for the Vatican Series...Italy, France, Spain...like that
TFN
What if Jim releases the AF's on Friday at 3:30 on the 25th. How cool would that be??? lol j/k of course.
I~K's Tuesday night read. Best to all.
The 2nd week of October 2006, I remember well. It was also the week I first bought ETIM at .0016 on a tip on a bottom buster thread of all places..."Who knew ?"... I do also remember Cory Lidle's last flight on the 11th in the City...here's the latest in case you havn't read it.
My best to the Yankees way to stick together.
Read:
05/01/2007 2:45 PM ET
Lidle accident details uncovered
NTSB releases final report on crash that killed pitcher
By Bryan Hoch / MLB.com
It is still not known whether Cory Lidle was piloting the plane that crashed on Oct. 11. (Frank Franklin II/AP)
NEW YORK -- The airplane crash that killed Yankees pitcher Cory Lidle last October was caused by inadequate planning, judgment and airmanship on the part of the pilot, the National Transportation Safety Board announced in a final report on Tuesday.
Lidle, 34, and a flight instructor, 27-year-old Tyler Stanger, died on Oct. 11, 2006, when Lidle's Cirrus SR-20 plane collided with a high-rise apartment building on Manhattan's Upper East Side.
The NTSB report stated that it has not been able to determine who was piloting the plane at the time of the accident. An investigation revealed no system, structural or engine malfunctions.
"The accident is a great tragedy in which a pleasure flight went horribly wrong and ultimately cost the lives of two young men," NTSB chairman Mark Rosenker said. "The pilots placed themselves in a precarious situation that could have been prevented by better judgment and planning."
Following the Yankees' playoff elimination in the American League Division Series, Lidle had said that he planned to fly his plane across the country to his California home, stopping periodically along the way to refuel.
Lidle and Stanger -- a commercial pilot with a flight instructor's certificate -- took off from New Jersey's Teterboro Airport on Oct. 11 in what was believed to have been a brief sightseeing excursion. The plane was piloted around the Statue of Liberty and up New York's East River, in view of Yankee Stadium.
Using radar data, the report concluded that the plane's pilot had attempted a 180-degree turn maneuver inside a limited turning space, but did not aggressively bank the airplane throughout the turn.
The pilot also did not use the full available width of the river. Wind may have played a factor, the report said.
As a result of the crash, the Federal Aviation Administration ordered small fixed-wing planes not to fly over the East River unless the pilot was in contact with air traffic controllers -- a regulation that the NTSB indicated will become permanent.
The NTSB said that Lidle's plane did not have a cockpit voice recorder or a flight data recorder, which may have yielded further information.
The identity of the person piloting the plane is of vital importance to Lidle's widow, Melanie, who has filed a suit against the insurance company MetLife, Inc., claiming that she is owed $1 million under Major League Baseball's benefit plan.
The plan contains an exclusion for an aircraft incident in which Lidle would have been acting in any role other than as a passenger, The Associated Press reported.
Melanie Lidle and the pitcher's 6-year-old son, Christopher, were invited to Yankee Stadium to throw out a ceremonial first pitch on April 2 as part of a moving Opening Day ceremony.
Jason Giambi, a high school and professional teammate of Lidle's, assisted with the ceremony and later drove in three runs in a game he dedicated to Lidle's memory.
"That was probably one of the toughest things I've ever had to do in my life," Giambi said then.
Lidle was acquired by the Yankees last July 30 as part of a multiple-player trade with the Philadelphia Phillies that also netted outfielder Bobby Abreu. He appeared in 10 games for the Yankees, going 4-3 with a 5.16 ERA in nine starts, plus one more appearance in the postseason.
The Yankees announced this spring that they would honor Lidle's memory by wearing a black stripe on the left sleeve of their home and road uniforms for the entire 2007 season. Lidle's locker stall at Yankee Stadium will also be left unused in tribute.
Bryan Hoch is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
precisely! LOL Now lets break out the 07 Calendar! and Smile
8 full months to EOY ! Should be a good year!
Now
GO ETIM :) :) :) ;)
Uplisting has a 30 day quiet time and 60 day Q and A period between a company and the Commission.
Agreed. IMO The AFs are about the quality not quantity. They will be for 04 05 06 and I do not expect huge numbers in these filings, they are basically the companies DD for the SEC for compliance not for determining whether or not I will invest, cause I/we already have.
Lmao... We'll she's not SOROS LOL !!!! If you know what I mean on the grammar thing...
Most of the longs I know (a growing number btw) are buying typically at the ask, most aren't that familiar with day trading techniques. BTW, we have a new shareholder I have heard in my arena. He's a Big'un, WOW can he buy alot...X 00000, glad he's aboard. I don't think he's gonna be on this board, busy guy Big Easy...xoxoxo
I bought twice at the ask and once at 53 on a 50/55 spread. Usually the ask, I don't like waiting for a fill cause this bird can fly with no notice..
Breathe! Relax ! Regroup ! Hang Tough ! Its all GOOD !
(not that you don't already know that, but its good to say it on down days of which we have had many in the past 7-8 months.)
ALL:
Many of us have quite a few shares and are thrilled to have them. We have funded and supported Eternal Image (Invested) good money. They will come thru, I for one have a lot of faith and confidence. Remember: Good news is coming, today is May 1, I anticipate news this week, next week and the following week. The content of the news should be strong and growth oriented. All news will be growth and expansion related. We are still developing and building the pipeline of distributors, our roads are still under construction so don't worry if you can't do 75 (lol) all the time. This is just a little traffic jam, thats all. IMHO ([)) (chin strap fastened)
lol
iknowa
We were just talking about a CA distributor this morning.. Glad some of us are on the same page.
lol
last 16:02 42 now showing at 55
34847717 just trickled in on my streamer 34785665 on another screen with your last tick at 2 secs after..
Is that your 95k? at 55
Hey Dude from Mars!! Wasss Shakin? Welcome MFM...j/k . Hi FTD...lol
I tried the 53's and nailed it on Friday, it took 30 minutes but what the heck..
iknowa "guy" lol
Are we loading up on 5's or what?.. Good afternoon ALL. Just getting to the board today.
Slap That A$K !!! Looking for the HOD at close!!! LOL BEE !
0.005 500500 OTO 14:59:24
0.005 221000 OTO 14:56:47
0.005 200000 OTO 14:56:23
0.005 19000 OTO 14:56:15
0.005 200000 OTO 14:56:15
0.005 200000 OTO 14:56:15
0.0054 32000 OTO 14:23:49
0.0055 32000 OTO 14:23:49
0.0055 25772 OTO 14:22:06
0.005 160000 OTO 14:05:53
0.0055 50000 OTO 13:58:01
0.0055 500 OTO 13:05:23
0.005 5000 OTO 13:04:19
0.005 257500 OTO 12:54:58
0.005 1420000 OTO 12:53:52
0.005 500000 OTO 12:45:29
0.005 500000 OTO 12:43:15
0.005 98000 OTO 12:43:06
0.005 200000 OTO 12:36:42
0.005 200000 OTO 12:33:55
0.005 300000 OTO 12:27:25
0.005 50000 OTO 12:26:36
0.005 1000000 OTO 12:26:34
0.005 80000 OTO 12:23:31
0.005 3200 OTO 12:23:25
0.005 10000 OTO 12:21:11
0.005 7500 OTO 12:16:10
0.005 100000 OTO 12:15:06
0.005 48000 OTO 12:14:42
0.005 500000 OTO 12:14:
([))
cheers and chin straps! lol
all that and a bag a chips..
I have held WNSH since last spring, thank you very much
Yep! Watch that guy, his track record is somewhat shakey...
Checking in....Thanks macanes we all appreciate the support. Warm regards to the group! for all the best wishes.
Doing fine!
On a positive note the PR was good to see and I did get filled today, it took awhile......... 53's to add to the stack.
Congrats to Bee for hitting the close on the nose...lol
iknowaguy
I'll see him shortly this am. Will be doing my buying on his PC. He has been catching so many fish, more this week than since the beginning of the year!!! 8 yesturday!!!