From: Jeffs Edwards<eevacation mail.com> To: > Sent: 10/12/2008 9:14:03 PM Subject: Re: Note from John Kodweis: Conduit Names Do not use those names On 10/12/08 10:57 AM, " Here is the latest. 1 < > wrote: ---- Original Message ---- From: Eric X Cheung Sent: 10/12/2008 12:49 AM EDT To: Cc: Kodweis: Subject: Note from John Kodweis: Conduit Names Jes Staley; ; Join S. Attached is the latest term sheet (5 pages) and the program diagram (1 page). I thought a brief explanation of the conduit names was in order. All are Dickens references. To me they seemed relevant to the task at hand, but if anyone thinks they are problematic then I have an alternative listed below. Micawber Co., LLC Wilkins Micawber, a friend of David Copperfield, recognizes the value of thrift. but can't bring himself to reign in his expenses. Despite the continual threat of debtors prison, he maintains a great sense of optimism, always sure "something will turn up." His famous dictum was: "Annual income twenty pounds, annual expendihre nineteen nineteen six, result happiness. Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pounds ought and six, result misery." Tellson's LLC The Tellson's Bank from A Tale of Two Cities is compared to prison and has staff described as the "oldest men who carry on business gravely" and when young men are taken to The Tellson's Bart "they are kept unseen like cheese until they had the NI Tellson's flavor and blue mold upon them." Marshalsea Funding, LLC Marshalsea was a notorious debtors prison that stood on the South Bank of the Thames for more than 500 years. William Dorritt, the father of Little Dorrit was imprisoned there, as was Charles Dickens's father. Jamdyce. LLC John Jarndyce is the owner of Bleak House and party to the notorious Jarndyce & Jamdyce lawsuit which concerns a vast inheritance. The suit is noteworthy for having gone on for so long that no one can remember what started it, and for the tremendous legal