A wise man once said: "if something sounds too good to be true - it
probably is"
- I am sure they are just after the $150 fee - they won't even bother
going after the free postage
> I get these ads through email all the time. Usually I just ignore
tham but as
> I'm getting poorer by the secon
In a message dated 8/4/03 9:41:08 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>The article discusses Levitt's research style: his tendency to ask odd
>but
>interesting questions and be clever enough to be able to test the
>hypotheses with publically available data. It also has some discussions
>of
>his career
> I couldn't access the article. Could anyone either copy and paste it to me
> (privately so as not to distrub others) or perhaps just give me a briefy
> summary? Thank you.
> David Levenstam
The article discusses Levitt's research style: his tendency to ask odd but
interesting questions and b
In a message dated 8/6/03 8:02:24 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>Was it not the maker of fortune cookies at cheap chinese take-out's?
>
>
>
>heh.
>
>
>
>-davidu
LOL. Okay, fair enough. Now what was HER name? ;)
David
I get these ads through email all the time. Usually I just ignore tham but as
I'm getting poorer by the second I thought I'd take a look. Do you think
this is just a gimmick to get the fees and maybe some free postage, or could it
be legit?
David
No Newspaper Ads… No Magazine Ads…No Bul
Along those lines, the following is a Paul Krugman article, which quite
humorously recaps a similar media event about a wunderkind economist --
probably a story only economists would find funny.
http://www.pkarchive.org/cranks/legend.html
At 09:51 PM 8/4/2003 -0500, you wrote:
> >The article d
> >The article discusses Levitt's research style: his tendency to ask
> odd >but >interesting questions and be clever enough to be able to
> test the >hypotheses with publically available data. It also has some
> discussions >of >his career path and a little about his personal life.
> Fabio
>
> T
Around U.S., a House Is a Home but Not a Bonanza
August 6, 2003
By DAVID LEONHARDT
FORT WAYNE, Ind. - On a tree-filled boulevard known as
Doctors' Row, the four- and five-bedroom brick Tudor homes
that are the jewels of this city's housing stock were
selling for about $150,000 two decades ago. A
Seriously - consider the use of a pay phone, or a hotel phone. It is often
hard for me, and many other customers, to get completely accurate
information on phone call prices. When it comes to phone calls, I've
always missed some charge or tax, or there is change from when I last got
the info.
So