I was in a program in college that was written up in Business Week. We were
interviewed but did not recognize the article when it came out. Our
Professor had always told us the press was not an accurate source, just one
person's take given a couple hours to create and write. After that we
believed it. Same here. Email the author? Why bother?
Or as the politician said "Speak ill of me if you must, speak kindly if you
will, but for goodness sake speak of me." Even bad press helps. --Martin,
'60 Safari
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On
Behalf Of Kathryn L HuL Hunt
Sent: Wednesday, August 02, 2000 10:26 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [VAC] NYTimes coverage (full article)
Bill,
I agree with you about this article. Should we all send e-mails to the
paper pointing out the inacuracies? I just sort of fumed when I read it.
Kathy
On Wed, 2 Aug 2000 13:01:44 -0500 (CDT) [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bill Scott)
writes:
> This article by Philip Nobel, is one of the most factually incorrect
> and
> misleading statements I have seen in modern newsprint. What he
> says
> makes very little sense, and it seems as if he is writing for the
> artistic and design community, and just interested in spouting a
> bunch
> of words. This is the most misleading article about Airstreams I
> have
> ever read.
>
> Bill Scott
> 61 Bambi, VAC & WBCCI #3221
> 1VP & Membership Chairman , WDCU
> http://www.servintfree.net/wbcci-dc/
>
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