Word: craige
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...before the suicides were discovered, Holly Craig in Fayetteville, Tennessee, received the floppy discs--and a letter of instruction. "Well, it's difficult to know where to start since you know quite a bit about us," it began. Indeed she did. Having done business with Heaven's Gate Web-design team, Craig had met 15 members and considered herself a "good friend" of seven of them, eventually becoming manager of their home page. The letter asked her to contact eight disciples who had left the group, as well as another who was still actively involved. She managed to reach...
...time you receive this, we'll be gone," read the first of six new pages Craig posted on the Web on Thursday. Above that message blared the headline HEAVEN'S GATE 'AWAY TEAM' RETURNS TO LEVEL ABOVE HUMAN IN DISTANT SPACE, preceding three "exit statements" from team members. Meanwhile, several of the disciples contacted by Craig began holding conference calls to plan strategy, exchanging messages from the "Level Above" and guidance from the deceased founders of Heaven's Gate, Do and Ti (Marshall Applewhite and Bonnie Nettles). They said the Website established last week would be updated with documents...
...Craig Malbon and his colleagues were convinced that they had made a momentous discovery. So they held a press conference at New York City's Grand Hyatt Hotel to announce it. What they had found, Malbon told reporters last week, was an enzyme that acts as the master switch for breast cancer, a disease that kills 44,000 women in the U.S. each year. "This gives us a new diagnostic tool and a new therapeutic strategy," maintained Malbon, a pharmacologist at the State University of New York at Stony Brook...
...bright spot for the Crimson was sophomore Craig MacDonald who shot a team-leading 78 for the day. Not only was this the most notable Crimson performance, but it was also the fourth best overall score among all competitors...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: An Air Force briefing provided few answers in the continuing search for Captain Craig Button and his A-10 attack jet. Deputy Air Force chief of staff Major General Donald Peterson would not comment on an emerging theory that a despondent Button committed suicide by crashing the jet into New York mountain, where some 20 reports of smoke and explosions have led would-be rescuers to concentrate their search. "I wouldn't speculate on family affairs here," Peterson said, adding that the Air Force was operating under the assumption that Button could still be alive. "I will only...