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| / Mobilise! / Issue 18 (May 1987) / Page 12 | Email page link | Print this page | ||
| The ten per cent man | ||
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Contracted to Cancer Research Foundation - with "great success" promotes funds for vivisection
Garry Knapp Learn about the legalized fraud perpetrated by a profit-oriented Medical Power in collusion with the Drug Trust, to the detriment of public health. Discover the full truth about the deadly cancer racket and those who keep it thriving. Read the books by Hans Ruesch, Swiss medical historian, banned from bookstores in the USA and Great Britain. |
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Knapp in bid to export fund plan From London reporter Democrat member of Parliament Mr Garry Knapp is trying to export to Britain a New Zealand form of fundraising for schools. He has approached at least one inner London school with a proposal - common in New Zealand but apparently new to Britain - for professional "piggy-back" fundraising. Mr Knapp, MP for East Coast Bays, whose party (formerly Social Credit of which he was deputy leader) favours monetary reform, is suggesting the school be linked to a major charity, such as cancer relief, to generate finance for the charity and the school. The fundraising would be organised by a New Zealand-based company with which he is associated. It would take 10 percent of the money raised as its professional fee, he told the voluntary-aided school in the London borough of Camden. A spokeswoman for the school said Mr Knapp had followed up the initial approach by his company with a telephone call to the school headmaster on Wednesday, introducing himself as a New Zealand member of Parliament. Two representatives of the company would be in London next week and he wanted to arrange a meeting. She understood other schools had also been approached. Voluntary-aided schools in Britain are funded 85 percent by the State and 15 percent by their own resources. They are usually former grammar schools which have been brought into the State system. The spokeswoman said the scheme suggested by Mr Knapp was "something new to us." Normally, they raised funds through fairs, parent levies and the like. She believed Mr Knapp's suggestion involved the selling of "scratch cards", tokens and mystery envelopes with hidden prizes. The bulk of the proceeds would go to the major charity, a smaller proportion to the school and the 10 percent professional fee to the company. Mr Knapp told the school his company had run the scheme "with great success" in New Zealand for 10 years. The company was contracted to the New Zealand Cancer Research Foundation. Authorities at the school were "interested" in the proposal, the spokeswoman said, but felt more information and a full discussion was needed.
she said. Mr Knapp confirmed to the Post he was a partner in a professional fundraising firm which approached schools, Scouts and other groups to assist in fundraising projects for cancer research. The schools would receive some financial compensation for their work. Mr Knapp said he had been to Britain several times in the past year to fulfill his responsibilities in the partnership. The business had been established for a number of years. Wellington Evening Post |
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Read: The Solid gold source "Beware of people and institutions involved in fundraising activities for "research"... To raise money towards the cure of the many diseases which conveniently remain uncured. Such people are sure never to mention the fact that substantial amounts of the monies raised finance vivisection... (or that they get their own percentage of the donations)." Read: Hans Ruesch's Bullet-in Nr. 1: exposes the conspiracies and infiltration into the anti-vivisection movemnet of those who benefit from keeping vivisection going. |
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