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This unsubscribe command requires your confirmation that you want to be unsubscribed. To confirm that you do want to unsubscribe, reply to this message so that the words "ok 3467796" appear somewhere on the subject line. Make sure that your reply message is addressed to unsubscribe-confirm@lyris.ttu.edu You will receive notification that your confirmation has been received, and that you have been unsubscribed. If you do not want to unsubscribe, do nothing. You will be kept on the mailing list. --- Return-Path: <765jh22gjh@pingtandao.com> Received: from ([221.221.12.197]) by edsel.tosm.ttu.edu with SMTP (Lyris ListManager WIN32 version 6.0i); Wed, 11 Oct 2006 20:54:34 -0500 From: " " <765jh22gjh@pingtandao.com> Subject: To: peirce-l-request Content-Type: text/html;charset="GB2312" Date: Thu, 12 Oct 2006 09:48:28 +0800 X-Priority: 3 X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 5.00.2615.200 # Mail sent to leave-peirce-l-3467796h was converted to these commands: unsubscribe peirce-l archive@mail-archive.com confirm end # This is the text of the message that triggered the action: Return-Path: <765jh22gjh@pingtandao.com> Received: from ([221.221.12.197]) by edsel.tosm.ttu.edu with SMTP (Lyris ListManager WIN32 version 6.0i); Wed, 11 Oct 2006 20:54:34 -0500 From: " " <765jh22gjh@pingtandao.com> Subject: China The Pearl To: leave-peirce-l-3467796h@lyris.ttu.edu Content-Type: text/html;charset="GB2312" Date: Thu, 12 Oct 2006 09:48:28 +0800 X-Priority: 3 X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 5.00.2615.200 <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> <html> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=gb2312"> <title>¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨¨</title> </head> <body> <p><strong>China Tianbao Handicraft Product Emport & Export Co.Ltd.</strong></p> <p align="left"><img src="http://www.bag007.com/uploadpic/2006919142537321.jpg" width="400" height="311"> </p> <p align="left"><font face="Arial"><a href="http://www.tbjck.com">http://www.tbjck.com(86-10-85893372) </a></font></p> <p><font face="Arial">The Pearl: A Cultural Treasure Through the Ages <br> A Gift of Nature <br> <br> </font><font face="Arial">Pearls are a natural wonder that have been treasured for centuries<br> </font><font face="Arial">by cultures ancient and modern all over the world. Greek mythology <br> proclaimed pearls to be tears of joy shed by the goddess Aphrodite. <br> Ancient Egyptians associated pearls with Isis, the goddess of healing and life.<br> <br> The Pearl was Prized by Rulers and Royalty<br> <br> Julius Caesar limited the wearing of pearls to the rulers of the <br> Roman Empire during the first century B.C. In the glory days of <br> the British Empire, only royalty were allowed to wear these lustrous gems.<br> <br> Noted in Legends and Literature<br> <br> Tribal Indians, too, believed that pearls were tears of their gods. <br> An Arab legend weaves a tale of dewdrops filled with moonlight that <br> fell into the ocean and were swallowed by oysters, creating the precious <br> pearls. The gates of Heaven are made of pearl, according to the King <br> James Bible. The list goes on and on. There are many more references to <br> the pearl in works of great literature, and the lustrous jewels are <br> often seen in paintings as jewelry, hair decorations and clothing adornments.<br> <br> Pearls have Always Been Valued and Cherished<br> <br> Native Americans may indeed have settled for strings of beads taken <br> in trade for the island of Manhattan. But a few centuries later, <br> in 1916, renown French jeweler Jacques Cartier acquired land there <br> for his first American store. The price? Two pearl necklaces.<br> <br> This long and storied past only adds to the appeal of the incomparable <br> pearl, cherished today as a traditional wedding gift, a birthstone, <br> and in jewelry that reflects taste and refinement. <br> </font> </p> </body> </html>