From everyone here at Ocean defenders, Greenpeace, and Mambo Tango. Our many condolances and thoughts are with the family and friends left behind by the great and wonderfull Steve Irwin, his memorys and legacy will not be forgoten. He will sadly be missed a true blessing for the world to have had such a man.
Steve Irwin, the hugely popular Australian television personality and conservationist known as the "Crocodile Hunter," was killed Monday by a stingray while filming off the Great Barrier Reef. He was 44. He will be missed by activists across the world.
His spirit will live on forever.
2/22/62 - 9/04/06
thank you Steve (CRIKEY!)
Ocean defenders Myspace
Greenpeace Myspace
Mambo Tango's Myspace
MySpace has connected thousands of Greenpeace activists and Ocean Defenders. Check out my page at http://www.myspace.com/thereshope and add them to your list! You will find them listed on my friends list.
ciao!
MySpace has connected thousands of Greenpeace activists and Ocean Defenders. Check out my page at http://www.myspace.com/thereshope and add them to your list! You will find them listed on my friends list.
ciao!
just wanted to say hello to my fellow GP volunteers. keep up the great work! lets all talk and stay in touch. check me out on myspace and send me a message if you'd like.
http://www.myspace.com/thereshope
cheers!
i never tought I'd say it.........I'm starting to like Walmart.
check out this article from Fortune Magazine.
full story: http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2006/08/07/8382593/index.htm
>>>
The 800 Wal-Mart Stores employees gathered in the home office for an all-day meeting were used to this kind of rah-rah talk. Top executives from Fortune 500 companies regularly trek to Bentonville, Ark., to pay homage to one of the world's most powerful companies and to shout out the Wal-Mart (Charts) cheer.
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This time, though, the cheerleading was coming from an unlikely source: Al Gore. Wal-Mart had invited America's most famous environmentalist to show his movie, "An Inconvenient Truth." "Having the former Democratic Vice President was a shock" to some people at the company, chief executive Lee Scott told the crowd. "At least based on a couple of my e-mails." But as the credits rolled, Gore strutted onto the stage to a standing ovation. Dressed in a blue suit and cowboy boots, he joked with the audience, answered questions in his best Southern drawl, and coyly denied that he had any plans to run for President again. (This wasn't exactly his base: He took just 32% of the vote in Benton County in 2000.) Before heading off to dinner with Wal-Mart chairman Rob Walton and Scott, Gore delivered a parting thought: As Wal-Mart embarks on a far-reaching plan to adopt business practices that are better for the environment, he said, the world will learn that "there need not be any conflict between the environment and the economy." Wal-Mart, you see, has decided to help save the earth.
full story: http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2006/08/07/8382593/index.htm >> |
September 2006 (3)
August 2006 (2)