With all due respect, that first two minutes of conversation may
have convinced Dr. Giner that you are smart enough and have the resources to
pursue monatomic research. Saying that one cannot divulge info is equal to
saying that it is so. Since his company may be developing this technology,
it may be unwise for him to admit to anything. What better way to capture
the fuel cell market than to let everyone else get Iridium the conventional way?
Regards;
Dennis C. Lee
At 08:06 PM 6/6/96 -0700, you wrote:
>Dr. Giner was quite open and gave me full disclosure. "If" he had
>privileged information he would have said so, in lieu of lying. Dr. Giner
>is a "respected scientist" with credits to his name. It is apparent that
>you feel that all is not on the table. Even though this was the first time
>I had ever spoken to Dr. Giner, it took less than two minutes for us to
>realize that we had several common bonds in the scientific arena.