The Supermarket Trick That Costs You Money!
Being a mom of 4 I know how important savings are. I am also a cashier
at a major supermarket. When I noticed the same 4 people always coming
in and getting overflowing carts of products for practically nothing, I
knew I had to find out how they are doing it. One day I decided I would
ask them when they are on my line. They all told me they are members at
http://bestprivateprices.com which they told me is a savings
clearinghouse for just about anything you can imagine. It didn't take
me long to visit their site and sign up for the sampler kit. When the
package arrived about a week after I signed up, I knew I had something
special in front of me. The people I spoke with werent kidding,
groceries I knew were at huge discounts but just bout everything else
to from perfumes to fine jewelry and tools. I hope this will help
others too!
Open and fund an IRA and get a $100 checkcard!!!
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address book. | To
view this email as a web page, visit this link.
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
Happy Holidays
from a company that cares!!! We are the FreedomTree Financial Group.
FreedomTree Asset Management has partnered with over 6000 of the
world's premier mutual funds, and our award-winning trading platform gives us
unparalleled access to the world's securities markets as well as money mangers
and variable annuities.
As our holiday present, we are now offering you a $100 Visa
checkcard for opening and funding an IRA. A minimum opening balance of $100
applies.*
To begin the process and contact an advisor give us a call toll-free
at 1.877.369.1889 or visit www.freedomtreefinancial.com TODAY!!!
With All Best Wishes
Your team at The FreedomTree Financial Group
info@...
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
*To qualify for the $100.00 bonus, your account 1) must be opened
and funded by November 27, 2007 and 2) opened with a minimum deposit of $300.
Your $100.00 bonus will be mailed with your first statement. Other transactional
fees apply. Please check with your adviser. Also, ask about our accelerated
bonus program!!!
Mutual funds, variable annuities and variable life products may be offered
only to persons in the United States and by way of a prospectus. This website
should not be considered a solicitation or offering of any investment products
or services to investors residing outside of the United States.
Financial advisor of and securities offered through FreedomTree Asset
Management, A Registered Investment Advisor. Mortgages and lending services
offered through FreedomTree Mortgage & Lending, An Equal Opportunity lender.
FreedomTree Asset Management, FreedomTree Mortgage and Lending, and
FreedomTree Financial are fully owned by The FreedomTree Financial Group of
Spence-Lingo & Company, Ltd.
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE:
The information in this e-mail may be confidential and may be legally
privileged. It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) named above. If
you are the intended recipient, be aware that your use of any confidential or
personal information may be restricted by state and federal privacy laws. If
you, the reader of this message, are not the intended recipient, you are hereby
notified that you should not further disseminate, distribute, or forward this
e-mail. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender and
delete the message. Thank you.
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address book. | To
unsubscribe, 1) PRESS REPLY and send a blank email or 2) send an email to
Unsubscribe. If option 2 is chosen, you must reference the email address or
group/listserv to which this advertisement was sent.
Offer YF873259 (11/2007)
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Open and fund an IRA and get a $100 checkcard!!!
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address book. | To
view this email as a web page, visit this link.
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
Happy Holidays
from a company that cares!!! We are the FreedomTree Financial Group.
FreedomTree Asset Management has partnered with over 6000 of the
world's premier mutual funds, and our award-winning trading platform gives us
unparalleled access to the world's securities markets as well as money mangers
and variable annuities.
As our holiday present, we are now offering you a $100 Visa
checkcard for opening and funding an IRA. A minimum opening balance of $100
applies.*
To begin the process and contact an advisor give us a call toll-free
at 1.877.369.1889 or visit www.freedomtreefinancial.com TODAY!!!
With All Best Wishes
Your team at The FreedomTree Financial Group
info@...
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
*To qualify for the $100.00 bonus, your account 1) must be opened
and funded by November 27, 2007 and 2) opened with a minimum deposit of $300.
Your $100.00 bonus will be mailed with your first statement. Other transactional
fees apply. Please check with your adviser. Also, ask about our accelerated
bonus program!!!
Mutual funds, variable annuities and variable life products may be offered
only to persons in the United States and by way of a prospectus. This website
should not be considered a solicitation or offering of any investment products
or services to investors residing outside of the United States.
Financial advisor of and securities offered through FreedomTree Asset
Management, A Registered Investment Advisor. Mortgages and lending services
offered through FreedomTree Mortgage & Lending, An Equal Opportunity lender.
FreedomTree Asset Management, FreedomTree Mortgage and Lending, and
FreedomTree Financial are fully owned by The FreedomTree Financial Group of
Spence-Lingo & Company, Ltd.
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE:
The information in this e-mail may be confidential and may be legally
privileged. It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) named above. If
you are the intended recipient, be aware that your use of any confidential or
personal information may be restricted by state and federal privacy laws. If
you, the reader of this message, are not the intended recipient, you are hereby
notified that you should not further disseminate, distribute, or forward this
e-mail. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender and
delete the message. Thank you.
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address book. | To
unsubscribe, 1) PRESS REPLY and send a blank email or 2) send an email to
Unsubscribe. If option 2 is chosen, you must reference the email address or
group/listserv to which this advertisement was sent.
Offer YF873260 (11/2007)
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Open and fund an IRA and get a $100 checkcard!!!
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address book. | To
view this email as a web page, visit this link.
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
Happy Holidays
from a company that cares!!! We are the FreedomTree Financial Group.
FreedomTree Asset Management has partnered with over 6000 of the
world's premier mutual funds, and our award-winning trading platform gives us
unparalleled access to the world's securities markets as well as money mangers
and variable annuities.
As our holiday present, we are now offering you a $100 Visa
checkcard for opening and funding an IRA. A minimum opening balance of $100
applies.*
To begin the process and contact an advisor give us a call toll-free
at 1.877.369.1889 or visit www.freedomtreefinancial.com TODAY!!!
With All Best Wishes
Your team at The FreedomTree Financial Group
info@...
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
*To qualify for the $100.00 bonus, your account 1) must be opened
and funded by November 24, 2007, 2) opened with a minimum deposit of $100, and
3) must remain open for three months. Your $100.00 bonus will be mailed with
your third statement. Other transactional fees apply. Please check with your
adviser. Also, ask about our accelerated bonus program!!!
Mutual funds, variable annuities and variable life products may be offered
only to persons in the United States and by way of a prospectus. This website
should not be considered a solicitation or offering of any investment products
or services to investors residing outside of the United States.
Financial advisor of and securities offered through FreedomTree Asset
Management, A Registered Investment Advisor. Mortgages and lending services
offered through FreedomTree Mortgage & Lending, An Equal Opportunity lender.
FreedomTree Asset Management, FreedomTree Mortgage and Lending, and
FreedomTree Financial are fully owned by The FreedomTree Financial Group of
Spence-Lingo & Company, Ltd.
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE:
The information in this e-mail may be confidential and may be legally
privileged. It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) named above. If
you are the intended recipient, be aware that your use of any confidential or
personal information may be restricted by state and federal privacy laws. If
you, the reader of this message, are not the intended recipient, you are hereby
notified that you should not further disseminate, distribute, or forward this
e-mail. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender and
delete the message. Thank you.
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address book. | To
unsubscribe, 1) PRESS REPLY and send a blank email or 2) send an email to
Unsubscribe. If option 2 is chosen, you must reference the email address or
group/listserv to which this advertisement was sent.
Offer YF873259 (11/2007)
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Open and fund an IRA and get a $100 checkcard!!!
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address book. | To
view this email as a web page, visit this link.
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
Happy Holidays
from a company that cares!!! We are the FreedomTree Financial Group.
FreedomTree Asset Management has partnered with over 6000 of the
world's premier mutual funds, and our award-winning trading platform gives us
unparalleled access to the world's securities markets as well as money mangers
and variable annuities.
As our holiday present, we are now offering you a $100 Visa
checkcard for opening and funding an IRA. A minimum opening balance of $100
applies.*
To begin the process and contact an advisor give us a call toll-free
at 1.877.369.1889 or visit www.freedomtreefinancial.com TODAY!!!
With All Best Wishes
Your team at The FreedomTree Financial Group
info@...
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
*To qualify for the $100.00 bonus, your account 1) must be opened
and funded by November 24, 2007, 2) opened with a minimum deposit of $100, and
3) must remain open for three months. Your $100.00 bonus will be mailed with
your third statement. Other transactional fees apply. Please check with your
adviser. Also, ask about our accelerated bonus program!!!
Mutual funds, variable annuities and variable life products may be offered
only to persons in the United States and by way of a prospectus. This website
should not be considered a solicitation or offering of any investment products
or services to investors residing outside of the United States.
Financial advisor of and securities offered through FreedomTree Asset
Management, A Registered Investment Advisor. Mortgages and lending services
offered through FreedomTree Mortgage & Lending, An Equal Opportunity lender.
FreedomTree Asset Management, FreedomTree Mortgage and Lending, and
FreedomTree Financial are fully owned by The FreedomTree Financial Group of
Spence-Lingo & Company, Ltd.
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE:
The information in this e-mail may be confidential and may be legally
privileged. It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) named above. If
you are the intended recipient, be aware that your use of any confidential or
personal information may be restricted by state and federal privacy laws. If
you, the reader of this message, are not the intended recipient, you are hereby
notified that you should not further disseminate, distribute, or forward this
e-mail. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender and
delete the message. Thank you.
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address book. | To
unsubscribe, 1) PRESS REPLY and send a blank email or 2) send an email to
Unsubscribe. If option 2 is chosen, you must reference the email address or
group/listserv to which this advertisement was sent.
Offer YF873259 (11/2007)
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Open and fund an IRA and get a $100 checkcard!!!
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address book. | To
view this email as a web page, visit this link.
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
Happy Holidays
from a company that cares!!! We are the FreedomTree Financial Group.
FreedomTree Asset Management has partnered with over 6000 of the
world's premier mutual funds, and our award-winning trading platform gives us
unparalleled access to the world's securities markets as well as money mangers
and variable annuities.
As our holiday present, we are now offering you a $100 Visa
checkcard for opening and funding an IRA. A minimum opening balance of $100
applies.*
To begin the process and contact an advisor give us a call toll-free
at 1.877.369.1889 or visit www.freedomtreefinancial.com TODAY!!!
With All Best Wishes
Your team at The FreedomTree Financial Group
info@...
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
*To qualify for the $100.00 bonus, your account 1) must be opened
and funded by November 24, 2007, 2) opened with a minimum deposit of $100, and
3) must remain open for three months. Your $100.00 bonus will be mailed with
your third statement. Other transactional fees apply. Please check with your
adviser. Also, ask about our accelerated bonus program!!!
Mutual funds, variable annuities and variable life products may be offered
only to persons in the United States and by way of a prospectus. This website
should not be considered a solicitation or offering of any investment products
or services to investors residing outside of the United States.
Financial advisor of and securities offered through FreedomTree Asset
Management, A Registered Investment Advisor. Mortgages and lending services
offered through FreedomTree Mortgage & Lending, An Equal Opportunity lender.
FreedomTree Asset Management, FreedomTree Mortgage and Lending, and
FreedomTree Financial are fully owned by The FreedomTree Financial Group of
Spence-Lingo & Company, Ltd.
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE:
The information in this e-mail may be confidential and may be legally
privileged. It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) named above. If
you are the intended recipient, be aware that your use of any confidential or
personal information may be restricted by state and federal privacy laws. If
you, the reader of this message, are not the intended recipient, you are hereby
notified that you should not further disseminate, distribute, or forward this
e-mail. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender and
delete the message. Thank you.
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address book. | To
unsubscribe, 1) PRESS REPLY and send a blank email or 2) send an email to
Unsubscribe. If option 2 is chosen, you must reference the email address or
group/listserv to which this advertisement was sent.
Offer YF873259 (11/2007)
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Hi Jak
could you plz send to me your CV , and where was your study ?
regards
Amr Zidan
Class optical
Saudi Arabia
--- In OpticalLabs@yahoogroups.com, "Jak Z. DELHYSA"
<jakdelhysa@...> wrote:
>
> Hi everyone,
>
> Is anyone familiar regarding short term service (optician)
around the world, I'm from Kosova (province in Southern Europe under
UN administration) and would like to work for a year somewhere
around the world.
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
>
> Jak Z. Delhysa
> Opticist - Optician - Augenoptiker
> OPTIKA JAKI
> 52 Ismet Jashari Street, - Prizren, KOSOVË
> cell: + 377 (0) 44 185 077 priv: + 381
(0) 29 624 - 455
> __________________________________________________
> Do You Yahoo!?
> Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
> http://mail.yahoo.com
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
Hi everyone,
Is anyone familiar regarding short term service (optician) around the world,
I’m from Kosova (province in Southern Europe under UN administration) and would
like to work for a year somewhere around the world.
Thanks in advance,
Jak Z. Delhysa
Opticist - Optician - Augenoptiker
OPTIKA JAKI
52 Ismet Jashari Street, - Prizren, KOSOVË
cell: + 377 (0) 44 185 077 priv: + 381 (0) 29 624 -
455
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Took me just 2 weeks to get my accredited Masters in this course. Already in
line for an interview on monday to hopefully get a better position within the
place I work at. Didn't even have to buy and books, go to any classes, or take
any exams. Honestly, if anyone here is looking to move up in this world and get
something like I did I suggest you use the same people I did; here is the
details 415 267 3940
Just got my BA and i did not even have to go to the campus for 1 day! Just got
a
tip from a friend and gave these guys a call 415 267-3940, completed a
small amountof paperwork and within a mere 4 weeks I was completely
accredited
at an internationally Uni! Now I am about to start applyin for some new
jobs.
Mutual funds are the way to go!!!
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address
book. | To view this email as a web page, visit this link.
Win with FreedomTree Financial & Russell Funds
Give us a call toll-free 1-877-369-1889
Time.
Your Most Precious Commodity.
These days, the average advisor spends more time focused on research
and constructing and managing portfolios. This means less time developing deeper
client relationships which get a the heart of your financial well-being.
At FreedomTree Asset Management, we understand that some advisors
want a better model and the ability to invest time wisely. So we have joined
forces with Russell Funds. Because mutual funds never disclose all the stocks
are bonds held their funds, an unsuspecting investor may not be diversified at
all.
Time. Well Invested. If you would like to learn more about how our
objective risk-managed solutions or how we may help you achieve a more efficient
asset allocation, please give us a call toll-free 1.877.369.1889 or vist
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
Your team at The FreedomTree Financial Group
info@...
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
Local 770 369 1889
Fax ..810 885 6979
(Cerulli Quantitative Update-Advisor
Metrics 2005, Business Development
includes Client Acquisition; Research
includes Training and Other; Portfolio
Management includes Trading, Client
Servicing, Operations.)
Russell Investment Group advises clients on approximately $2
trillion2 in assets in over forty countries and has delivered investment
solutions for
more than seventy years.
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
Mutual funds, variable annuities and variable life products may be
offered only to persons in the United States and by way of a prospectus. This
website should not be considered a solicitation or offering of any investment
products or services to investors residing outside of the United States.
Financial advisor of and securities offered through FreedomTree
Asset Management, A Registered Investment Advisor. Mortgages and lending
services offered through FreedomTree Mortgage & Lending, An Equal Opportunity
lender.
FreedomTree Asset Management, FreedomTree Mortgage and Lending, and
FreedomTree Financial are fully owned by The FreedomTree Financial Group of
Spence-Lingo & Company, Ltd.
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE:
The information in this e-mail may be confidential and may be
legally privileged. It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) named
above. If you are the intended recipient, be aware that your use of any
confidential or personal information may be restricted by state and federal
privacy laws. If you, the reader of this message, are not the intended
recipient, you are hereby notified that you should not further disseminate,
distribute, or forward this e-mail. If you have received this e-mail in error,
please notify the sender and delete the message. Thank you.
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address
book. | To unsubscribe, 1) PRESS REPLY and send a blank email or 2) send an
email to Unsubscribe. If option 2 is chosen, you must reference the email
address or group/listserv to which this advertisement was sent.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
you can now officially call me Dr. :) Took me about 2
months,
but after calling these guys 415 267-3940 they helped get me setup and get fully
accredited! Great people.
Mutual funds are the way to go!!!
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address
book. | To view this email as a web page, visit this link.
Win with FreedomTree Financial & Russell Funds
Give us a call toll-free 1-877-369-1889
Time.
Your Most Precious Commodity.
These days, the average advisor spends more time focused on research
and constructing and managing portfolios. This means less time developing deeper
client relationships which get a the heart of your financial well-being.
At FreedomTree Asset Management, we understand that some advisors
want a better model and the ability to invest time wisely. So we have joined
forces with Russell Funds. Because mutual funds never disclose all the stocks
are bonds held their funds, an unsuspecting investor may not be diversified at
all.
Time. Well Invested. If you would like to learn more about how our
objective risk-managed solutions or how we may help you achieve a more efficient
asset allocation, please give us a call toll-free 1.877.369.1889 or visit
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
Your team at The FreedomTree Financial Group
info@...
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
Local 770 369 1889
Fax ..810 885 6979
(Cerulli Quantitative Update-Advisor
Metrics 2005, Business Development
includes Client Acquisition; Research
includes Training and Other; Portfolio
Management includes Trading, Client
Servicing, Operations.)
Russell Investment Group advises clients on approximately $2
trillion2 in assets in over forty countries and has delivered investment
solutions for
more than seventy years.
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
Mutual funds, variable annuities and variable life products may be
offered only to persons in the United States and by way of a prospectus. This
website should not be considered a solicitation or offering of any investment
products or services to investors residing outside of the United States.
Financial advisor of and securities offered through FreedomTree
Asset Management, A Registered Investment Advisor. Mortgages and lending
services offered through FreedomTree Mortgage & Lending, An Equal Opportunity
lender.
FreedomTree Asset Management, FreedomTree Mortgage and Lending, and
FreedomTree Financial are fully owned by The FreedomTree Financial Group of
Spence-Lingo & Company, Ltd.
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE:
The information in this e-mail may be confidential and may be
legally privileged. It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) named
above. If you are the intended recipient, be aware that your use of any
confidential or personal information may be restricted by state and federal
privacy laws. If you, the reader of this message, are not the intended
recipient, you are hereby notified that you should not further disseminate,
distribute, or forward this e-mail. If you have received this e-mail in error,
please notify the sender and delete the message. Thank you.
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address
book. | To unsubscribe, 1) PRESS REPLY and send a blank email or 2) send an
email to Unsubscribe. If option 2 is chosen, you must reference the email
address or group/listserv to which this advertisement was sent.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Hi,
I know that this list is for professionals, and I am not one, but I
hope you may be able and willing to help me. I have a pair of glasses
with varilux varifocals (progressive lenses) at the moment, but need
new ones with a slightly different prescription. One local opticians
offers Pentax lenses at a lower price. Will there be a noticeable
difference between them in terms of overall quality and areas of
distortion etc. In short, can I safely change from Varilux to cheaper
Pentax lenses. My reading figures are +2.25. Cant remember what the
distance ones were, but I only just need galsses for driving, so
they're not too bad
Hope you can help. there is surprisingly little information on this on
the internet.
Richard
Climb higher!!! Give us a call toll-free 877-369-1889
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address
book. | To view this email as a web page, visit this link.
Climb higher!!! Invest, Grow, Protect your money. We can help
Dear Reader:
Thank you for your time.
We here at the FreedomTree Financial Group once again would like to
remind you of the wealth of services we offer here at the firm.
Presently we have access to more than 6000 no-load mutual funds.
These are perfect for the beginner investor who desires to get a taste of
securities markets.
Mutual funds are great for:
a.. Retirement Planning
b.. College Planning such as 529 and Education Savings Planning
c.. General Investing
We also offer a wealth of insurance and financial planning.
a.. Life, Health, Disability , Long-term Care, Annuities
b.. Estate Planning
We hope you make us your FirstChoice.
And again, we appreciate your time.
With All Best Wishes
Your team at The FreedomTree Financial Group
info@...
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
Local 770 369 1889
Fax ..810 885 6979
Mutual funds, variable annuities and variable life products may be offered
only to persons in the United States and by way of a prospectus. This website
should not be considered a solicitation or offering of any investment products
or services to investors residing outside of the United States.
Financial advisor of and securities offered through FreedomTree Asset
Management, A Registered Investment Advisor. Mortgages and lending services
offered through FreedomTree Mortgage & Lending, An Equal Opportunity lender.
FreedomTree Asset Management, FreedomTree Mortgage and Lending, and
FreedomTree Financial are fully owned by The FreedomTree Financial Group of
Spence-Lingo & Company, Ltd.
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE:
The information in this e-mail may be confidential and may be legally
privileged. It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) named above. If
you are the intended recipient, be aware that your use of any confidential or
personal information may be restricted by state and federal privacy laws. If
you, the reader of this message, are not the intended recipient, you are hereby
notified that you should not further disseminate, distribute, or forward this
e-mail. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender and
delete the message. Thank you.
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address book. | To
unsubscribe, 1) PRESS REPLY and send a blank email or 2) send an email to
Unsubscribe. If option 2 is chosen, you must reference the email address or
group/listserv to which this advertisement was sent.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Climb higher!!! Give us a call toll-free 877-369-1889
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address
book. | To view this email as a web page, visit this link.
Climb higher!!! Invest, Grow, Protect your money. We can help
Dear Reader:
Thank you for your time.
We here at the FreedomTree Financial Group once again would like to
remind you off the wealth of services we offer here at the firm.
Presently we have access to more than 6000 no-load mutual funds.
These are perfect for the beginner investor who desires to get a taste of
securities markets.
Mutual funds are great for:
a.. Retirement Planning
b.. College Planning such as 529 and Education Savings Planning
c.. General Investing
We also offer a wealth of insurance and financial planning.
a.. Life, Health, Disability , Long-term Care, Annuities
b.. Estate Planning
We hope you make us your FirstChoice.
And again, we appreciate your time.
With All Best Wishes
Your team at The FreedomTree Financial Group
info@...
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
Local 770 369 1889
Fax ..810 885 6979
Mutual funds, variable annuities and variable life products may be offered
only to persons in the United States and by way of a prospectus. This website
should not be considered a solicitation or offering of any investment products
or services to investors residing outside of the United States.
Financial advisor of and securities offered through FreedomTree Asset
Management, A Registered Investment Advisor. Mortgages and lending services
offered through FreedomTree Mortgage & Lending, An Equal Opportunity lender.
FreedomTree Asset Management, FreedomTree Mortgage and Lending, and
FreedomTree Financial are fully owned by The FreedomTree Financial Group of
Spence-Lingo & Company, Ltd.
Toll-free 1.877.369.1889
www.FreedomTreeFinancial.com
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE:
The information in this e-mail may be confidential and may be legally
privileged. It is intended only for the use of the individual(s) named above. If
you are the intended recipient, be aware that your use of any confidential or
personal information may be restricted by state and federal privacy laws. If
you, the reader of this message, are not the intended recipient, you are hereby
notified that you should not further disseminate, distribute, or forward this
e-mail. If you have received this e-mail in error, please notify the sender and
delete the message. Thank you.
To ensure delivery of our emails, please Add Us to your address book. | To
unsubscribe, 1) PRESS REPLY and send a blank email or 2) send an email to
Unsubscribe. If option 2 is chosen, you must reference the email address or
group/listserv to which this advertisement was sent.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Hi Dr Subudhi,
It is good to hear of your great qualifications and your desire to help! We
sure can use a few more eye care professional people on our teams. In fact, IHS
is considering the purchase of more eye exam machines if there are enough people
to have a third team in Feb.
Below is a previous letter I wrote which I still use since it has a ton of
helpful info. After reading it, let me know if this trip works for you or not.
I certainly an available by my phone to answer questions. Also, consider
passing the word of our need for people to friends and other professionals who
may want to go.
If you plan to go after looking at the details of the trip, you need to do two
things, (1) send in an application so we know your skills, etc. (2) send an
e-mail to me or Gary Ernst, our Project Director right away. The IHS Planning
Team is leaving in less than a week and it would be good for them to know what
your skills are so they can plan a site to use those skills. Gary's e-mail is:
gary_ernst@...
Karen (my wife) and I hope to see you in February. We are hoping to be on an
eye team, too. In the past we have also served on medical, dental, and surgery
teams so we have a variety of experience.
Best regards,
John
KB0UUP
320-634-4386
*****************
Info letter about IHS (International Health Services)
- the first part of this letter was originally written several years ago for a
radio guy but it is still very applicable and informative, so I still use it to
give people an idea of the mission.
Since we finished our most recent medical mission to Honduras the end of
February, many amazing events are still fresh in our minds! Paul was our radio
net controller and once again he was in the thick of things. We had a medical
emergency where several ham radio operators helped to get a severe burn patient
out of the remote village of Auka and into a burn center in Tegucigalpa. That
was in the middle of seeing the thousands of patients we see on a ‘normal’
basis.
This year Bill and I were providing radio and engineering support for a
medical and dental team in the remote village of Uhi. We set up our radio gear
for shortwave radio voice communications and for e-mailing back home (yes,
e-mail through a radio system!). I also set up a smaller radio system to talk
to other nearby IHS village teams and Puerto Lempira. We got up and running
just in time for patient referrals and other critical messages.
One of the first mornings a woman showed up in a wheelbarrow because she could
not walk on her own. This is not surprising since there are no roads or
vehicles in this village (to get here we must travel by boat or use a small
plane). We did not have any adaptive devices on hand, so Jim, our doctor,
advised her to return the following week. We called in on the radio to see if a
walker could be brought by our small airplane. When the woman came back several
days later, we had a walker waiting for her. We cleared out the waiting room
and waited to witness this great event. Dr. Jim helped her out of the
wheelbarrow and tremendous joy spread over her face and all of ours as she began
to walk!! It was the greatest feeling in the world knowing that we made a big
difference in her life.
Another time, a girl about 9 years old was brought into the clinic with a
fever of 104 and was shaking terribly. She had been vomiting, had a poor
appetite, and was not drinking anything. We immediately sprung into action, with
Dr. Jim making a consult radio call to another IHS team doctor in another
village. Dr. Jim determined she had malaria. Malaria is not very common here
but it does happen on rare occasions. Jack, our pharmacist, gave the young girl
a combination of chloroquine and primidone for the malaria. She was given
liquid Tylenol and placed in a back room with cool wet towels to reduce her
fever. Dr. Jim also started an IV to keep the girl well hydrated. In a few
hours she was improving. The next day we made a house call to the hut she lived
in and she was amazingly better. Her fever had gone down, she was drinking
water, and even eating a little. It is a good thing we can take chloroquine as
a preventative.
About the same time we saw the girl, we also had a middle-aged woman come to
the clinic with a deep cut on her forehead. She said it was from a large stick
but it looked more like a machete cut to us. Dr. Jim did a great job of
cleaning the wound and stitching her up but the lady must have been tough as
nails. She hardly flinched through the entire procedure.
Manuel was our team dentist. He is from LaCeiba, Honduras and has come with
our Uhi team for 3 years now, due to our shortage of U.S. dentists signing up.
He did great, pulling many teeth during our 10 days of work in the village.
That is about all he had time to do since there is no dental care available in
the village. The one village nurse (who is the entire medical care for the
village) has her hands full delivering babies and all the other medical care
needed. I also ended up being Manuel’s dental assistant when a squirming kid
needed to be held still plus I helped to sterilize his equipment. The kids had
no idea what was happening when Manuel came with the lidocaine needle.
Occasionally, some teams may do fillings when time permits. This year we even
had a dentist who made dentures on the Yocon team.
We also had a young lady show up with her baby that was about a month old.
The baby was not feeding properly, causing malnourishment and was in very grave
condition. Bill immediately got on the radio and again talked to Jaime, our
radio operator in Puerto Lempira, to send the small airplane to get our patient.
Within a couple hours we had the mother and the struggling baby flown to the
hospital where she now has a chance at life. A special thanks goes to Ruth our
translator who is also a nurse and helped a lot to get the baby on to the plane.
She also did a ton of good work to talk with the locals plus she helped a lot
with other babies and children. Thanks Ruth !
By the end of the mission, we had flown about 10 referral surgery patients
from Uhi to Puerto Lempira to see Dr. Tim, our surgeon with the IHS surgical
team there. Other IHS village teams did the same. It is a good thing we have a
small plane available to do this and radios to make it happen. Dr.Tim performed
many surgeries while he was there and no doubt saved lives. That makes our
medical care in that part of Honduras able to handle most anything that we see
from simple cuts to important surgical care.
Near the end of the mission we had a radio call asking if we had any spare
reading glasses. We did, so the small plane came in, got them, and took them to
another village where IHS had an Eye Glasses team. They saw many hundreds of
eye patients and distributed many prescription and reading glasses. It turns
out no one had ever been in that location before to give out glasses. We can
also thank the Lions clubs that collect the glasses for us!
…..I could go on and on with stories of our daily work but I must also tell
you about International Health Services, the great organization that makes all
this possible…..
Are you interested in volunteer medical work or translating for a team going
to Honduras? Are you looking for a worthy place to give support or to donate
medical or radio gear? If you are considering any of these, you certainly have
come to the right place. Joining our next mission next February is easier than
you think. We are always in dire need for translators, dentists, doctors,
nurses, anesthetists, eye specialists, and pharmacists… anyone with medical
skills. We also need radio folks plus engineers and helpers. Please consider
this.
Obviously, this is an important decision for anyone who is considering going
and I want to give you as much info as needed so you can make an informed
decision. I have one warning, for most who go it is something you get hooked
on. Of those who sign up each year, over half are repeat team members. Some
will bring along friends, spouse, and mature sons and daughters. I have gone to
Honduras a dozen times and another trip is planned. In the past I have taken my
wife, my brother, two of my nieces, a teen-age Spanish student, and friends.
IHS has been doing this for about 25 years so we are very organized and have
many trusted friends in Honduras to help us. That helps so there are not a lot
of unpleasant surprises along the way (relatively speaking). Since Honduras is
the poorest country in the Western hemisphere, it is very stable and safe, even
when we get out into the local villages.
What we do... about 100 volunteers will go to Honduras the last two weeks of
February. We usually have 2 surgery teams and about 6 or 7 medical/dental
clinics. In addition, we usually send 1 or 2 eyeglasses clinics. We would have
more teams if enough people signed up. The village clinic teams typically have
one or two doctors, one or two nurses, a pharmacist, a dentist, sometimes a
dental assistant, a ham radio operator, an engineer, 1 or 2 translators, and 2
or 3 general helpers. Depending on the qualifications of those who apply,
sometimes a person may do two positions. I am a ham radio operator but I
usually do the engineer job and some general helper tasks as well. The engineer
work is just a basic task of keeping the small generator going and other basic
handy-man tasks. In that capacity I have repaired many things including door
handles, installed shower curtains, put up a clothes lines, repaired LP
cooksets, and other basic fix-it tasks besides keeping my own
gear in good repair. For the general helpers and others there is a LOT of
miscellaneous work to do to assist the doctors, dentists, and pharmacists to
keep them going in a busy day. So, if you have someone who wants to go with you
(spouse/friend) they can usually fit on to the same team as you. Once we get to
a village, we all tend to share the work so we all get a hand in doing many
different things. Each village is different but generally we will have a
medical clinic open for about 10 full days plus at most sites we will also have
a dental clinic. Most years we will also have two surgery sites. At those
locations we will have one or two surgeons, two O.R. nurses, an anesthetist, a
radio person, one or two general helpers and in some locations, an engineer.
For radio operators plus the doctors, nurses, and other medical folks, we do
need to have copies of licenses in advance to give to officials in Honduras to
get everyone certified for operations there.
Normally, copies get sent in with applications and when the October logistics
team travels to LaCeiba, Honduras, all the papers are filed. That is good, all
we do is turn in the paperwork and the rest is taken care of.
Where do we go... we have a variety of locations. We have a couple
medical/dental and eye clinic teams that go to the mountain areas of central
Honduras. There, it is semi-modern (relatively speaking) usually with local
electricity available some of the day. Other clinic teams are in small remote
villages in the eastern ‘LaMosquitia’ region where there are very few roads and
no phones or local electricity. In these places we bring our own generator and
a radio for communications. We do use a few trucks and buses but our
transportation is mostly by large and small airplanes. The Wings of Hope and
other organizations donate the use of their small planes during the days of our
mission. Because of this, we can bring all the supplies we need such as our
food, gear, personal items, and medical supplies. We have been doing this for
25 years so we have a good idea what we need. We send out a detailed
Orientation information to give you a lot of detailed info including
what IHS provides each team.
Radio operations… while each of us are with our team in a village we mostly
use basic HF voice operations on 40 meters to contact our local net three times
a day. We will also have e-mail capability in most of the villages through our
radio. We will use the e-mail for IHS work and for personal e-mails back home
to family and friends. IHS has a 2 Icom IC-706 transceivers plus all the needed
antennas, power supplies, and miscellaneous gear. Since about 8 or 9 sites
require a radio, most operators choose to bring their own HF transceiver along.
We try to keep the amount of gear that has to be brought with us from the U.S.
to a minimum but still enough to handle all our needs. Each team will get a
Comm box issued to them that has all the basic radio gear needed for HF voice
ops except the transceiver. We also provide generators to team sites that will
need them. Each team will also get an Engineering box which is stocked with
many common hand tools plus commonly
needed supplies of nails, wire, rope, extension cords, water purifier kit, and
the like.
A typical day has the radio voice net operate once in the morning, once at
noon and once around 5:00 p.m. to pass along general info on how the team is
doing and to receive news and information from our net control. Our village
teams also use the radio to call for the small plane when we get a very serious
patient that needs to get to our surgery site. In between those three net
times, radio operators will help out others in doing whatever needs to be done.
Since we talk on the radio just to other IHS teams, knowing Spanish is not
necessary for the radio part of the work. If you do know some Spanish, that is
nice for doing some of the other helper work. This past year we had many teams
with two radio operators. One ‘officially’ was designated as the radio operator
and the other was assigned as the team engineer who basically does a lot of
handy man work.
In some ways the radio work has similarities to ‘Field Day’ and from this
perspective we will put a less experienced person on a team with someone with a
lot of HF voice expertise (when we have more radio people apply then the number
of teams that need them). The past few years nearly all the teams also brought
some Pactor gear and they were able to send and receive e-mail messages for all
their team members. That helped us stay in touch with families back home. It
even helped when there was a medical emergency back in the U.S. Our net control
in LaCeiba has daily radio and telephone contact with the U.S. but for team
members in a village, getting and sending e-mails a few times sure is nice when
you are away from home. We have a lot of interest in ham folks signing up to go
but we do try to get at least one ham with Pactor e-mail/messaging capability on
each team and they usually get assigned the team radio operator position.
Giving support... this can be done easily and fills a vital need of support
for our mission. Many folks realize the true value of the work we do.
Unfortunately, some can not actually go, so they help out those that can in
several ways. Whether it is financial support or vitally needed donated
equipment, you can contact us at the addresses at the bottom of this letter. I
also have an official address for you to send financial support to. All
appropriate medical and radio gear can be sent to IHS but call or write me first
to see where is best. For radio gear, we are mostly in need of laptops, portable
HF transceivers, and pactor controllers (SCS pactor III preferred) and we sure
can use a lot of other support items as well. Since we are a bonafied charitable
organization, all donations are tax deductible and donators will get a nice
thank you letter with the official tax deduction information. More importantly,
you will be helping your fellow medical and radio folks to
give quality medical and dental care to people who desperately need it and
appreciate it. Just check out their smiling faces on the web site or CD
mentioned below.
Costs... the project fee is about $500. This is actually a bargain since this
is less than half of the total average cost to send someone. With that fee, and
many large and small donations from organizations and friends, we are able to
take care of nearly all of your basic needs for the entire two weeks you are on
the mission. It also helps us to buy needed medical and pharmacy supplies. It
is only logical to bring the necessary medications to treat what the doctors
find with the patients they see. On the average, each of the clinic teams will
receive over $4500 in medical supplies. From your project fee, you receive a
lot. From the time you arrive in LaCeiba, all food, transportation, and basic
housing are taken care of. When in small villages, it is obviously NOT in a
Raddison Hotel but it is in a clean facility of some type. For example, many
choose to stay with a host family while we are in LaCeiba. They are VERY nice
homes and are close to the Hotel Paris,
our headquarters and radio net control for the mission. The other expense to
participants of the mission is transportation from our homes in the U.S (or
wherever you live), to LaCeiba, Honduras and return. Some people choose to make
their own plans because there are many great sites to see and places to go
before or after the mission. Diving or checking the beach on Roatan Island,
visiting the Copan Mayan ruins, visiting a rain forest park, white water
rafting, sightseeing in the mountains, or just shopping for bargains are some
things people do. 75% of the IHS people do some little venture, usually after
the mission. Obviously our main purpose is not to just go and have fun, we have
very important work to do in the villages, etc. However, after 2 weeks of work
it is nice to take a day or two and relax. We do have a group travel plan that
has various arrival and departure dates to accommodate some of these side
adventures. It goes from Minneapolis through Houston to
San Pedro Sula, Honduras and return on Continental Airlines. Donna Bench, our
agent, can also connect other cities through Houston. Also note that flights to
San Pedro Sula can go on Delta via Miami and on American via Miami so you have
some options. I do have a handy letter that describes how to get your airline
tickets to and from Honduras.… just let me know if you want it and I can e-mail
that to you. Karen and I lived in England for four years and did a lot of
travelling, but I can honestly say, this is the best two week trip we ever do
for the price, even though it is work.
What is happening right now. We are actively seeking applications right now.
We would like to have all applications for a February mission by mid September
due to our need to collect names of applicants and then complete a roster of
team assignments before our October planning team leaves for Honduras. From
that schedule many things get done prior to February on a time line that is
important to get all our gear, supplies, and participants to Honduras and get
everyone well informed about the mission. Later applications get accepted, too,
but then it is to fill in spots on teams where they still need people. Besides
our need for experienced medical folks and radio operators, we are currently
looking for medical and radio equipment. With a very tight budget, we can not
afford to purchase a lot of new and expensive gear yet we do want to provide
good team support.
When to apply…. We receive the bulk of our applications in July through
September for a February mission although a person can apply anytime before then
if they know they will be available. After September, applications will get
taken to fill empty team positions. Actually, we prefer early applications so
we can pass on a lot of information. We also want to work with people to get
them up to speed on our particular routine of doing things and getting them
familiar with specific places and such. Each place has a unique work situation
and good preparation makes for a great mission with few surprises… there are no
Radio Shack or other stores in those remote villages! Each village has its own
unique medical needs as well. On the application form, there is a place where
you can put down the names of someone you may want to be on a team with. So,
you need to fill that in if you want to be with someone you know. Getting
assigned to one of the many teams mostly depends on
how well qualified you are to handle the job you are applying for. Most people
who contact me about radio jobs will put on their application that they are
willing to be a radio operator or an engineer or a general helper. Applying for
all positions a person is qualified helps if certain jobs are filled early. For
example, this past mission had 7 radio operators but we also had many other
“extra” hams assigned other positions on the team (mostly engineers and general
helpers). So, applying for several positions is obviously beneficial to go on
the mission. Another consideration is which team location you want to get
assigned to. Some teams take a boat up a river, many teams use a small plane to
get to their remote village, some travel into the mountains by bus. Obviously
surgical teams will be in less primitive conditions since they need to be at an
adequate facility to do their work. In my opinion all locations are good.
Obviously, later applicants (after
October) will have less selection of places to go and job positions since they
will be assigned to the teams that are missing certain positions, if there are
any. If you need an application, a good place to get one is from our IHS web
site (IHSOFMN mentioned below). Just click on “Contact IHS” and download the
application (.pdf or Word file).
Radio personnel - We SOMETIMES have a large number of IHS hams who go. At those
times we fill many of the team radio operator and other positions. One benefit
for a newcomer to be a team radio operator is if they have pactor/Winlink
experience and gear but it is not a requirment. If you are a ham and you get
assigned on a team with another radio person, you will actually share the radio
work and other tasks regardless of which title you have on the paperwork.
Shipping items to Honduras….. yes we can. Dole Fruit graciously lets us use
several of their containers to send down our gear, personal items, purchased
medical supplies, food, and lots of medical equipment (for hospitals and
clinics). We will send down our IHS radios plus any donated and other
replacement gear. Larry, our shipping guy, buys a lot of the food for each
team. He will buy soups, and a lot of dehydrated type things that actually cook
up pretty good, at least it is better than beans and rice every day. Most of
that is shipped in the container although some beans and rice, plus a lot of
other fruits and vegetables get purchased in LaCeiba on the first day down
there. Each year we also get generators and such things purchased or donated
and they get shipped as well. So, if you want to send some clothes or whatever,
so you have less to drag through the airport, that is fine. Your personal box
or tub needs to be sent to our collection point in Minneapolis
by the end of December. The only thing to remember is that the shipment is one
way. If you want to get items back home, it has to come back with you. Many
people send clothes and other items that they just give to the local people when
they leave, so their suitcase stays light coming home, too.
More info... IHS has a web site with some basic info for all applicants, it
is: www.IHSOFMN.org I suggest looking at the Newsbreak newsletters for a lot of
personal info and stories of past experiences. We also have a special link to a
site where we distribute a lot of info to inquirers and to people signed up to
go. That site is: www.groups.Yahoo.com/group/IHSmission/ Our IHS radio group
also has some info (especially radio items) on a Yahoo site. The link to that
site is: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/IHSradio/ You can see several things
there but I recommend going to the left side of the site’s home page and
clicking on PHOTO. From there you will see some of our people in action. Also,
the FILES area has a LOT of items related to the radio work of a mission plus
other things. These two sites should give you a lot of extra info plus
application forms. I also have many materials for you including a great
computer CD with lots of info on it. The photos
(hundreds of them) and journals on the CD show typical medical/dental teams in
villages plus eye care and surgery teams. The CD is packed with other info
including several super Power Point presentations that give a lot of detail in
our work. I often use the CD as orientation materials for group presentations
and for first time applicants. If you want any of these items, just let me know
what to send and where to mail them and I will send them to you right away.
When you sign up and are put on a team, you will receive a large amount of
information, usually in later November. There is a ton of handy information on
what clothes, gear, and other items to bring plus many other tips. Also, this
information will have very comprehensive Orientation information. It will give
lots of info on how to prepare for the mission and what to expect during the
trip. It also talks about health care issues, such as what vaccinations to
have, etc. Most importantly, you will get the name of your team Leader who is a
veteran going to your team location who can tell you all about the village you
are going to and other details. I am available to answer any questions that
relate to the general mission and to the radio work that goes with it. If you
have any questions related to other jobs on a team, let me know and I will pass
on the info or I will get you in touch with another Director or someone who can
get you all the latest info for that job.
Early applicants have a very good chance of going, especially if they are
flexible in what work position on the team they are willing to take. I do ask
that whether or not this mission works for you, consider passing the word along…
we can always use a few extra folks and support to help us out. If it is not
this year, we can plan ahead for next time. This is especially true for doctors,
nurses, translators, dentists, and other medical folks who we have a tougher
job in recruiting.
Most new folks have called me directly, before signing up for a mission. I
highly recommend that you do that to start with. My evening phone number is:
320-634-4386. I am home most evenings and some on weekends. You have my e-mail
address, so write whatever questions you have, if you prefer that over a phone
call.
I and the very poor of Honduras thank you so much for an interest in this very
wonderful and rewarding work!
Best regards,
John Kirckof
JMKKEK@...
Phone: 320-634-4386
IHS Board Of Directors
"b.n.r subudhi" <bnrsubudhi@...> wrote:
.hmmessage P { margin:0px; padding:0px } body.hmmessage {
FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY:Tahoma }
---------------------------------
Dear sir,
I am interested to be part of the team to visit Honduras.
Kindly register my name.
With regards.
Dr.B.N.R.Subudhi
.ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-mkp {border:1px solid
#d8d8d8;font-family:Arial;padding:0px 14px;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-mkp hr
{border:1px solid #d8d8d8;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-mkp #EC_hd
{color:#628c2a;font-size:85%;font-weight:bold;line-height:122%;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-mkp #EC_ads {margin-bottom:10px;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-mkp .EC_ad
{padding:0 0;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-mkp .EC_ad a
{color:#0000ff;text-decoration:none;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-sponsor
#EC_ygrp-lc {font-family:Arial;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-sponsor #EC_ygrp-lc
#EC_hd {font-weight:bold;font-size:78%;line-height:122%;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-sponsor #EC_ygrp-lc .EC_ad {margin-bottom:10px;padding:0 0;}
.ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-mlmsg
{font-size:13px;font-family:arial,helvetica,clean,sans-serif;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-mlmsg table {font-size:inherit;font:100%;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-mlmsg select, .ExternalClass input, .ExternalClass textarea {font:99%
arial,helvetica,clean,sans-serif;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-mlmsg pre,
.ExternalClass code {font:115% monospace;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-mlmsg EC_*
{line-height:1.22em;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-text {font-family:Georgia;}
.ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-text p {;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-tpmsgs
{font-family:Arial;clear:both;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-vitnav
{padding-top:10px;font-family:Verdana;font-size:77%;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-vitnav a {padding:0 1px;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-actbar
{clear:both;white-space:nowrap;color:#666;text-align:right;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-actbar .EC_left {float:left;white-space:nowrap;} .ExternalClass
.EC_bld {font-weight:bold;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-grft
{font-family:Verdana;font-size:77%;padding:15px 0;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-ft
{font-family:verdana;font-size:77%;border-top:1px solid #666;padding:5px 0;}
.ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-mlmsg #EC_logo {padding-bottom:10px;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-vital
{background-color:#e0ecee;margin-bottom:20px;padding:2px 0 8px 8px;}
.ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-vital #EC_vithd
{font-size:77%;font-family:Verdana;font-weight:bold;color:#333;text-transform:up\
percase;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-vital ul {padding:0;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-vital ul li {list-style-type:none;clear:both;border:1px solid
#e0ecee;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-vital ul li .EC_ct
{font-weight:bold;color:#ff7900;float:right;width:2em;text-align:right;padding-r\
ight:.5em;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-vital ul li .EC_cat {font-weight:bold;}
.ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-vital a {text-decoration:none;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-vital a:hover {text-decoration:underline;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-sponsor #EC_hd {color:#999;font-size:77%;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-sponsor #EC_ov {padding:6px
13px;background-color:#e0ecee;margin-bottom:20px;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-sponsor #EC_ov ul {padding:0 0 0 8px;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-sponsor #EC_ov li
{list-style-type:square;padding:6px 0;font-size:77%;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-sponsor #EC_ov li a {text-decoration:none;font-size:130%;}
.ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-sponsor #EC_nc
{background-color:#eee;margin-bottom:20px;padding:0 8px;} .ExternalClass
#EC_ygrp-sponsor .EC_ad {padding:8px 0;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-sponsor
.EC_ad #EC_hd1
{font-family:Arial;font-weight:bold;color:#628c2a;font-size:100%;line-height:122\
%;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-sponsor .EC_ad a {text-decoration:none;}
.ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-sponsor .EC_ad a:hover {text-decoration:underline;}
.ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-sponsor .EC_ad p {;} .ExternalClass EC_o
{font-size:0;} .ExternalClass .EC_MsoNormal {;} .ExternalClass #EC_ygrp-text
tt {font-size:120%;} .ExternalClass blockquote {;} .ExternalClass .EC_replbq
{;}
---------------------------------
Windows Live Spaces is here! It’s easy to create your own personal Web site.
Check it out!
---------------------------------
Catch up on fall's hot new shows on Yahoo! TV. Watch previews, get listings,
and more!
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
For those unfamiliar with the term, FOREX (FOReign
EXchange market), refers to an international exchange
market where currencies are bought and sold. The
Foreign Exchange Market that we see today began in the
1970's, when free exchange rates and floating
currencies were introduced. In such an environment
only participants in the market determine the price of
one currency against another, based upon supply and
demand for that currency.
FOREX is a somewhat unique market for a number of
reasons. Firstly, it is one of the few markets in
which it can be said with very few qualifications that
it is free of external controls and that it cannot be
manipulated. It is also the largest liquid financial
market, with trade reaching between 1 and 1.5 trillion
US dollars a day. With this much money moving this
fast, it is clear why a single investor would find it
near impossible to significantly affect the price of a
major currency. Furthermore, the liquidity of the
market means that unlike some rarely traded stock,
traders are able to open and close positions within a
few seconds as there are always willing buyers and
sellers.
http://automatedstocktrading.blogspot.com/2007/10/forex-101-make-money-with-curr\
ency.html
________________________________________________________________________________\
____
Looking for a deal? Find great prices on flights and
hotels with Yahoo! FareChase.
http://farechase.yahoo.com/
________________________________________________________________________________\
____
Don't let your dream ride pass you by. Make it a reality with Yahoo! Autos.
http://autos.yahoo.com/index.html
Spectacle lens industry is very small.co mpanies making spectacle lens
mkae people fool by giving new name to every progressive lenses they
introduce.
essilor new 360 physio is nothing but market gimmick from co how lens
can have wave front.
Most experienced traders consider that the best and
most profitable of the capital markets is without
doubt the Forex market. During many years Forex
trading had been not for everyone but the sole domain
of the major banks, large financial institutions and
countries central banks; for example the U.S. Federal
Reserve Bank. Fortunately these days, thanks to the
internet the market has been opened to anyone willing
to learn the appropriate techniques in forex trading
and with the intention of making substantial profits
using the same pathway the large institutions use to
consistently make pretty high profits from trading in
the Foreign Exchange market.
The Forex markets are open 24-hrs a day during most of
the week, allowing forex traders a huge flexibility to
enter end exit their trades. As long as the markets
keep open the prices will be constantly fluctuating
and reacting to news and market conditions. All this
activity can be easily seen by looking at the forex
charts. And is thanks to this fluctuations that
traders can have the potential of profitable trades
the whole day.
http://stockmarketsuccess2.blogspot.com/2007/10/forex-kiss-strategy-profits-for-\
sure.html
________________________________________________________________________________\
____
Pinpoint customers who are looking for what you sell.
http://searchmarketing.yahoo.com/
There is a 50% higher rate of attraction to women who
use pheromone enhanced fragrances. These grances show
a 50% increase in sexual attention from men to women.
75% of women using these fragrances report increases
in kissing, petting and sexual activity.
Is your favorite fragrance pheromone enhanced?
http://fargive.cn/item.php?group_id=131&id=3074
________________________________________________________________________________\
____
Building a website is a piece of cake. Yahoo! Small Business gives you all the
tools to get online.
http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/webhosting
Learning to trade takes much longer than most of us
would like. How would you like to take a shortcut and
graduate early from the school of hard knocks?
When I ask the question that way, almost everyone is
ready to learn to do that. The problem is that when I
tell you whats required, youll find a reason why it
wont work for you.
http://stockmarketsuccess2.blogspot.com/2007/10/stock-picks-101-learning-easy-wa\
y.html
________________________________________________________________________________\
____
Need a vacation? Get great deals
to amazing places on Yahoo! Travel.
http://travel.yahoo.com/
Hi Dr Srinu,
It is great to hear of your interest in joining one of the 10 or so teams we
are hoping to have! The dates are from 15 Feb until 2 March, 2008. Yes, we
certainly can use more eye care professionals for many open positions on teams!
Yes, we can be a little flexible on dates you can participate. Below is an
info letter I wrote a couple years ago but it has a lot of current info about
the planned Feb mission. It should answer most of your questions about all teh
things IHS provides to a team during the mission. Also, I have attached an
application form for you. Before you fill it out, contact me so I can help get
you to where you want with your friend.
Currently we want to have at least one prescription eye glasses team in the
LaMosquitia (eastern) area of Honduras where hurricane Felix hit (we would like
to have two there) plus one in the central mountain area. So far we have just
one eye examiner and many support people signed up for those teams.
IHS also would like to sponsor an eye surgery team. Recently, we had one in
LaCeiba and it worked out well in the facilities there.
Thanks for your interest in helping and for the financial support,
John
320-634-4386
_____________
Info letter about IHS (International Health Services)
- the first part of this letter was originally written several years ago for a
radio guy but it is still very applicable and informative, so I still use it to
give people an idea of the mission.
Since we finished our most recent medical mission to Honduras the end of
February, many amazing events are still fresh in our minds! Paul was our radio
net controller and once again he was in the thick of things. We had a medical
emergency where several ham radio operators helped to get a severe burn patient
out of the remote village of Auka and into a burn center in Tegucigalpa. That
was in the middle of seeing the thousands of patients we see on a ‘normal’
basis.
This year Bill and I were providing radio and engineering support for a
medical and dental team in the remote village of Uhi. We set up our radio gear
for shortwave radio voice communications and for e-mailing back home (yes,
e-mail through a radio system!). I also set up a smaller radio system to talk
to other nearby IHS village teams and Puerto Lempira. We got up and running
just in time for patient referrals and other critical messages.
One of the first mornings a woman showed up in a wheelbarrow because she could
not walk on her own. This is not surprising since there are no roads or
vehicles in this village (to get here we must travel by boat or use a small
plane). We did not have any adaptive devices on hand, so Jim, our doctor,
advised her to return the following week. We called in on the radio to see if a
walker could be brought by our small airplane. When the woman came back several
days later, we had a walker waiting for her. We cleared out the waiting room
and waited to witness this great event. Dr. Jim helped her out of the
wheelbarrow and tremendous joy spread over her face and all of ours as she began
to walk!! It was the greatest feeling in the world knowing that we made a big
difference in her life.
Another time, a girl about 9 years old was brought into the clinic with a
fever of 104 and was shaking terribly. She had been vomiting, had a poor
appetite, and was not drinking anything. We immediately sprung into action, with
Dr. Jim making a consult radio call to another IHS team doctor in another
village. Dr. Jim determined she had malaria. Malaria is not very common here
but it does happen on rare occasions. Jack, our pharmacist, gave the young girl
a combination of chloroquine and primidone for the malaria. She was given
liquid Tylenol and placed in a back room with cool wet towels to reduce her
fever. Dr. Jim also started an IV to keep the girl well hydrated. In a few
hours she was improving. The next day we made a house call to the hut she lived
in and she was amazingly better. Her fever had gone down, she was drinking
water, and even eating a little. It is a good thing we can take chloroquine as
a preventative.
About the same time we saw the girl, we also had a middle-aged woman come to
the clinic with a deep cut on her forehead. She said it was from a large stick
but it looked more like a machete cut to us. Dr. Jim did a great job of
cleaning the wound and stitching her up but the lady must have been tough as
nails. She hardly flinched through the entire procedure.
Manuel was our team dentist. He is from LaCeiba, Honduras and has come with
our Uhi team for 3 years now, due to our shortage of U.S. dentists signing up.
He did great, pulling many teeth during our 10 days of work in the village.
That is about all he had time to do since there is no dental care available in
the village. The one village nurse (who is the entire medical care for the
village) has her hands full delivering babies and all the other medical care
needed. I also ended up being Manuel’s dental assistant when a squirming kid
needed to be held still plus I helped to sterilize his equipment. The kids had
no idea what was happening when Manuel came with the lidocaine needle.
Occasionally, some teams may do fillings when time permits. This year we even
had a dentist who made dentures on the Yocon team.
We also had a young lady show up with her baby that was about a month old.
The baby was not feeding properly, causing malnourishment and was in very grave
condition. Bill immediately got on the radio and again talked to Jaime, our
radio operator in Puerto Lempira, to send the small airplane to get our patient.
Within a couple hours we had the mother and the struggling baby flown to the
hospital where she now has a chance at life. A special thanks goes to Ruth our
translator who is also a nurse and helped a lot to get the baby on to the plane.
She also did a ton of good work to talk with the locals plus she helped a lot
with other babies and children. Thanks Ruth !
By the end of the mission, we had flown about 10 referral surgery patients
from Uhi to Puerto Lempira to see Dr. Tim, our surgeon with the IHS surgical
team there. Other IHS village teams did the same. It is a good thing we have a
small plane available to do this and radios to make it happen. Dr.Tim performed
many surgeries while he was there and no doubt saved lives. That makes our
medical care in that part of Honduras able to handle most anything that we see
from simple cuts to important surgical care.
Near the end of the mission we had a radio call asking if we had any spare
reading glasses. We did, so the small plane came in, got them, and took them to
another village where IHS had an Eye Glasses team. They saw many hundreds of
eye patients and distributed many prescription and reading glasses. It turns
out no one had ever been in that location before to give out glasses so they
gave out several hundred pairs of glasses. We can also thank the Lions clubs
that collect the glasses for us!
…..I could go on and on with stories of our daily work but I must also tell
you about International Health Services, the great organization that makes all
this possible…..
Are you interested in volunteer medical work or translating for a team going
to Honduras? Are you looking for a worthy place to give support or to donate
medical or radio gear? If you are considering any of these, you certainly have
come to the right place. Joining our next mission next February is easier than
you think. We are always in dire need for translators, dentists, doctors,
nurses, anesthetists, eye specialists, and pharmacists… anyone with medical
skills. We also need radio folks plus engineers and helpers. Please consider
this.
Obviously, this is an important decision for anyone who is considering going
and I want to give you as much info as needed so you can make an informed
decision. I have one warning, for most who go it is something you get hooked
on. Of those who sign up each year, over half are repeat team members. Some
will bring along friends, spouse, and mature sons and daughters. I have gone to
Honduras a dozen times and another trip is planned. In the past I have taken my
wife, my brother, two of my nieces, a teen-age Spanish student, and friends.
IHS has been doing this for about 25 years so we are very organized and have
many trusted friends in Honduras to help us. That helps so there are not a lot
of unpleasant surprises along the way (relatively speaking). Since Honduras is
the poorest country in the Western hemisphere, it is very stable and safe, even
when we get out into the local villages.
What we do... about 100 volunteers will go to Honduras the last two weeks of
February. We usually have 2 surgery teams and about 6 or 7 medical/dental
clinics. In addition, we usually send 1 or 2 eyeglasses clinics. We would have
more teams if enough people signed up. The village clinic teams typically have
one or two doctors, one or two nurses, a pharmacist, a dentist, sometimes a
dental assistant, a ham radio operator, an engineer, 1 or 2 translators, and 2
or 3 general helpers. Depending on the qualifications of those who apply,
sometimes a person may do two positions. I am a ham radio operator but I
usually do the engineer job and some general helper tasks as well. The engineer
work is just a basic task of keeping the small generator going and other basic
handy-man tasks. In that capacity I have repaired many things including door
handles, installed shower curtains, put up a clothes lines, repaired LP
cooksets, and other basic fix-it tasks besides keeping my own
gear in good repair. For the general helpers and others there is a LOT of
miscellaneous work to do to assist the doctors, dentists, and pharmacists to
keep them going in a busy day. So, if you have someone who wants to go with you
(spouse/friend) they can usually fit on to the same team as you. Once we get to
a village, we all tend to share the work so we all get a hand in doing many
different things. Each village is different but generally we will have a
medical clinic open for about 10 full days plus at most sites we will also have
a dental clinic. Most years we will also have two surgery sites. At those
locations we will have one or two surgeons, two O.R. nurses, an anesthetist, a
radio person, one or two general helpers and in some locations, an engineer.
For radio operators plus the doctors, nurses, and other medical folks, we do
need to have copies of licenses in advance to give to officials in Honduras to
get everyone certified for operations there.
Normally, copies get sent in with applications and when the October logistics
team travels to LaCeiba, Honduras, all the papers are filed. That is good, all
we do is turn in the paperwork and the rest is taken care of.
Where do we go... we have a variety of locations. We have a couple
medical/dental clinic teams that go to the mountain areas of central Honduras.
There, it is semi-modern (relatively speaking) usually with local electricity
available some of the day. Other clinic teams are in small remote villages in
the eastern ‘LaMosquitia’ region where there are very few roads and no phones or
local electricity. In these places we bring our own generator and a radio for
communications. We do use a few trucks and buses but our transportation is
mostly by large and small airplanes. The Wings of Hope and other organizations
donate the use of their small planes during the days of our mission. Because of
this, we can bring all the supplies we need such as our food, gear, personal
items, and medical supplies. We have been doing this for 25 years so we have a
good idea what we need. We send out a detailed Orientation information to give
you a lot of detailed info including what IHS
provides each team.
Radio operations… while each of us are with our team in a village we mostly
use basic HF voice operations on 40 meters to contact our local net three times
a day. We will also have e-mail capability in most of the villages through our
radio. We will use the e-mail for IHS work and for personal e-mails back home
to family and friends. IHS has a 2 Icom IC-706 transceivers plus all the needed
antennas, power supplies, and miscellaneous gear. Since about 8 or 9 sites
require a radio, most operators choose to bring their own HF transceiver along.
We try to keep the amount of gear that has to be brought with us from the U.S.
to a minimum but still enough to handle all our needs. Each team will get a
Comm box issued to them that has all the basic radio gear needed for HF voice
ops except the transceiver. We also provide generators to team sites that will
need them. Each team will also get an Engineering box which is stocked with
many common hand tools plus commonly
needed supplies of nails, wire, rope, extension cords, water purifier kit, and
the like.
A typical day has the radio voice net operate once in the morning, once at
noon and once around 5:00 p.m. to pass along general info on how the team is
doing and to receive news and information from our net control. Our village
teams also use the radio to call for the small plane when we get a very serious
patient that needs to get to our surgery site. In between those three net
times, radio operators will help out others in doing whatever needs to be done.
Since we talk on the radio just to other IHS teams, knowing Spanish is not
necessary for the radio part of the work. If you do know some Spanish, that is
nice for doing some of the other helper work. This past year we had many teams
with two radio operators. One ‘officially’ was designated as the radio operator
and the other was assigned as the team engineer who basically does a lot of
handy man work.
In some ways the radio work has similarities to ‘Field Day’ and from this
perspective we will put a less experienced person on a team with someone with a
lot of HF voice expertise (when we have more radio people apply then the number
of teams that need them). The past few years nearly all the teams also brought
some Pactor gear and they were able to send and receive e-mail messages for all
their team members. That helped us stay in touch with families back home. It
even helped when there was a medical emergency back in the U.S. Our net control
in LaCeiba has daily radio and telephone contact with the U.S. but for team
members in a village, getting and sending e-mails a few times sure is nice when
you are away from home. We have a lot of interest in ham folks signing up to go
but we do try to get at least one ham with Pactor e-mail/messaging capability on
each team and they usually get assigned the team radio operator position.
Giving support... this can be done easily and fills a vital need of support
for our mission. Many folks realize the true value of the work we do.
Unfortunately, some can not actually go, so they help out those that can in
several ways. Whether it is financial support or vitally needed donated
equipment, you can contact us at the addresses at the bottom of this letter. I
also have an official address for you to send financial support to. All
appropriate medical and radio gear can be sent to IHS but call or write me first
to see where is best. For radio gear, we are mostly in need of laptops, portable
HF transceivers, and pactor controllers (SCS pactor III preferred) and we sure
can use a lot of other support items as well. Since we are a bonafied charitable
organization, all donations are tax deductible and donators will get a nice
thank you letter with the official tax deduction information. More importantly,
you will be helping your fellow medical and radio folks to
give quality medical and dental care to people who desperately need it and
appreciate it. Just check out their smiling faces on the web site or CD
mentioned below.
Costs... the project fee is about $500. This is actually a bargain since this
is less than half of the total average cost to send someone. With that fee, and
many large and small donations from organizations and friends, we are able to
take care of nearly all of your basic needs for the entire two weeks you are on
the mission. It also helps us to buy needed medical and pharmacy supplies. It
is only logical to bring the necessary medications to treat what the doctors
find with the patients they see. On the average, each of the clinic teams will
receive over $4500 in medical supplies. From your project fee, you receive a
lot. From the time you arrive in LaCeiba, all food, transportation, and basic
housing are taken care of. When in small villages, it is obviously NOT in a
Raddison Hotel but it is in a clean facility of some type. For example, many
choose to stay with a host family while we are in LaCeiba. They are VERY nice
homes and are close to the Hotel Paris,
our headquarters and radio net control for the mission. The other expense to
participants of the mission is transportation from our homes in the U.S (or
wherever you live), to LaCeiba, Honduras and return. Some people choose to make
their own plans because there are many great sites to see and places to go
before or after the mission. Diving or checking the beach on Roatan Island,
visiting the Copan Mayan ruins, visiting a rain forest park, white water
rafting, sightseeing in the mountains, or just shopping for bargains are some
things people do. 75% of the IHS people do some little venture, usually after
the mission. Obviously our main purpose is not to just go and have fun, we have
very important work to do in the villages, etc. However, after 2 weeks of work
it is nice to take a day or two and relax. We do have a group travel plan that
has various arrival and departure dates to accommodate some of these side
adventures. It goes from Minneapolis through Houston to
San Pedro Sula, Honduras and return on Continental Airlines. Donna Bench, our
agent, can also connect other cities through Houston. Also note that flights to
San Pedro Sula can go on Delta via Miami and on American via Miami so you have
some options. I do have a handy letter that describes how to get your airline
tickets to and from Honduras.… just let me know if you want it and I can e-mail
that to you. Karen and I lived in England for four years and did a lot of
travelling, but I can honestly say, this is the best two week trip we ever do
for the price, even though it is work.
What is happening right now. We are actively seeking applications right now.
We would like to have all applications for a February mission by mid September
due to our need to collect names of applicants and then complete a roster of
team assignments before our October planning team leaves for Honduras. From
that schedule many things get done prior to February on a time line that is
important to get all our gear, supplies, and participants to Honduras and get
everyone well informed about the mission. Later applications get accepted, too,
but then it is to fill in spots on teams where they still need people. Besides
our need for experienced medical folks and radio operators, we are currently
looking for medical and radio equipment. With a very tight budget, we can not
afford to purchase a lot of new and expensive gear yet we do want to provide
good team support.
When to apply…. We receive the bulk of our applications in July through
September for a February mission although a person can apply anytime before then
if they know they will be available. After September, applications will get
taken to fill empty team positions. Actually, we prefer early applications so
we can pass on a lot of information. We also want to work with people to get
them up to speed on our particular routine of doing things and getting them
familiar with specific places and such. Each place has a unique work situation
and good preparation makes for a great mission with few surprises… there are no
Radio Shack or other stores in those remote villages! Each village has its own
unique medical needs as well. On the application form, there is a place where
you can put down the names of someone you may want to be on a team with. So,
you need to fill that in if you want to be with someone you know. Getting
assigned to one of the many teams mostly depends on
how well qualified you are to handle the job you are applying for. Most people
who contact me about radio jobs will put on their application that they are
willing to be a radio operator or an engineer or a general helper. Applying for
all positions a person is qualified helps if certain jobs are filled early. For
example, this past mission had 7 radio operators but we also had many other
“extra” hams assigned other positions on the team (mostly engineers and general
helpers). So, applying for several positions is obviously beneficial to go on
the mission. Another consideration is which team location you want to get
assigned to. Some teams take a boat up a river, many teams use a small plane to
get to their remote village, some travel into the mountains by bus. Obviously
surgical teams will be in less primitive conditions since they need to be at an
adequate facility to do their work. In my opinion all locations are good.
Obviously, later applicants (after
October) will have less selection of places to go and job positions since they
will be assigned to the teams that are missing certain positions, if there are
any. If you need an application, a good place to get one is from our IHS web
site (IHSOFMN mentioned below). Just click on “Contact IHS” and download the
application (.pdf or Word file).
Radio personnel - We SOMETIMES have a large number of IHS hams who go. At those
times we fill many of the team radio operator and other positions. One benefit
for a newcomer to be a team radio operator is if they have pactor/Winlink
experience and gear but it is not a requirment. If you are a ham and you get
assigned on a team with another radio person, you will actually share the radio
work and other tasks regardless of which title you have on the paperwork.
Shipping items to Honduras….. yes we can. Dole Fruit graciously lets us use
several of their containers to send down our gear, personal items, purchased
medical supplies, food, and lots of medical equipment (for hospitals and
clinics). We will send down our IHS radios plus any donated and other
replacement gear. Larry, our shipping guy, buys a lot of the food for each
team. He will buy soups, and a lot of dehydrated type things that actually cook
up pretty good, at least it is better than beans and rice every day. Most of
that is shipped in the container although some beans and rice, plus a lot of
other fruits and vegetables get purchased in LaCeiba on the first day down
there. Each year we also get generators and such things purchased or donated
and they get shipped as well. So, if you want to send some clothes or whatever,
so you have less to drag through the airport, that is fine. Your personal box
or tub needs to be sent to our collection point in Minneapolis
by the end of December. The only thing to remember is that the shipment is one
way. If you want to get items back home, it has to come back with you. Many
people send clothes and other items that they just give to the local people when
they leave, so their suitcase stays light coming home, too.
More info... IHS has a web site with some basic info for all applicants, it
is: www.IHSOFMN.org I suggest looking at the Newsbreak newsletters for a lot of
personal info and stories of past experiences. We also have a special link to a
site where we distibute a lot of info to inquirers and to people signed up to
go. That site is: www.groups.Yahoo.com/group/IHSmission/ Our IHS radio group
also has some info (especially radio items) on a Yahoo site. The link to that
site is: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/IHSradio/ You can see several things
there but I recommend going to the left side of the site’s home page and
clicking on PHOTO. From there you will see some of our people in action. Also,
the FILES area has a LOT of items related to the radio work of a mission plus
other things. These two sites should give you a lot of extra info plus
application forms. I also have many materials for you including a great
computer CD with lots of info on it. The photos
(hundreds of them) and journals on the CD show typical medical/dental teams in
villages plus eye care and surgery teams. The CD is packed with other info
including several super Power Point presentations that give a lot of detail in
our work. I often use the CD as orientation materials for group presentations
and for first time applicants. If you want any of these items, just let me know
what to send and where to mail them and I will send them to you right away.
When you sign up and are put on a team, you will receive a large amount of
information, usually in later November. There is a ton of handy information on
what clothes, gear, and other items to bring plus many other tips. Also, this
information will have very comprehensive Orientation information. It will give
lots of info on how to prepare for the mission and what to expect during the
trip. It also talks about health care issues, such as what vaccinations to
have, etc. Most importantly, you will get the name of your team Leader who is a
veteran going to your team location who can tell you all about the village you
are going to and other details. I am available to answer any questions that
relate to the general mission and to the radio work that goes with it. If you
have any questions related to other jobs on a team, let me know and I will pass
on the info or I will get you in touch with another Director or someone who can
get you all the latest info for that job.
Early applicants have a very good chance of going, especially if they are
flexible in what work position on the team they are willing to take. I do ask
that whether or not this mission works for you, consider passing the word along…
we can always use a few extra folks and support to help us out. If it is not
this year, we can plan ahead for next time. This is especially true for doctors,
nurses, translators, dentists, and other medical folks who we have a tougher
job in recruiting.
Most new folks have called me directly, before signing up for a mission. I
highly recommend that you do that to start with. My evening phone number is:
320-634-4386. I am home most evenings and some on weekends. You have my e-mail
address, so write whatever questions you have, if you prefer that over a phone
call.
I and the very poor of Honduras thank you so much for an interest in this very
wonderful and rewarding work!
Best regards,
John Kirckof
JMKKEK@...
Phone: 320-634-4386
IHS Board Of Directors
IRIS <myeyesense@...> wrote:
DEAR SIR
I would like to sign up but send me the details. I got
<< message truncated >>
---------------------------------
Don't let your dream ride pass you by. Make it a reality with Yahoo! Autos.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Like most people when I started trading the foreign
exchange I had very little time to monitor trades
because of my job and other responsibilities. However
this does not mean you can not make plenty of money
trading the foreign exchange. Intrigued? Please grab
nice cup of tea or coffee and read on.
http://automatedstocktrading.blogspot.com/2007/10/foreign-exchange-trading-while\
-working.html
________________________________________________________________________________\
____
Pinpoint customers who are looking for what you sell.
http://searchmarketing.yahoo.com/
Are you looking to make money off the stock market?
Everybody wants to invest in stock and become rich,
but they do not always know how to do that. Here are
some stock investing tips that will help you to earn
money trading stock online.
Before we begin you should know exactly what will be
needed so you can trade stock. The first thing you
will need is a computer and the internet. Trading
stock can be done over the phone but the internet
helps you to trade stock the best possible way. The
other thing you will need is a broker for who you will
be trading through. Now that you know what you will
need lets take a look at some stock investing tips
online:
http://automatedstocktrading.blogspot.com/2007/10/five-stock-investing-tips-to-m\
ake-money.html
________________________________________________________________________________\
____
Shape Yahoo! in your own image. Join our Network
Research Panel today!
http://surveylink.yahoo.com/gmrs/yahoo_panel_invite.asp?a=7
________________________________________________________________________________\
____
Pinpoint customers who are looking for what you sell.
http://searchmarketing.yahoo.com/