[rec.nude] dialing for dollars

grady@Apple.COM (Grady Ward) (05/28/88)

Recently on the net I've seen a few messages asking for money.  The 
senders supply such worthy reasons as education, feeding a starving 
sister, and so on.

Taking advantage of this trend, I would like to ask you all for money, 
too.

      Of course, I do not need it.  Apple Computer is a wonderful 
employer; I have a very good salary, two-digit profit sharing, and an 
excellent stock option.  I am happily married to a wonderful 
woman, Felicity, a Stanford graduate with a Masters in Horticulture.  
Less than a year ago, I founded a Hi-IQ club which now has over 130 
members around the world, including Marilyn vos Savant and 
Christopher Harding, individuals recognized by the popular press as 
having the highest IQ's in the world.  I write essays and fiction for 
various publications.  I am 6'1" with blond hair and blue eyes and 
good health.  My future prospects look great.

     But I want to have more fun.  And I'll even give you something for 
your money.  After everyone has sent me money, I will promise to 
have as much imaginative fun with it as I possibly can.  Furthermore, 
after I do, I will send everyone who has contributed to Grady's 
Fun(d) a letter describing exactly how I "spent" my time.

So, you can be the keystone of my summer blowout, or you can 
press "N" and go out for another desultory pizza tonight.  Just fold a 
twenty dollar bill in a sheet of paper with your return address and 
send to:

Grady's Fun(d)
380 N. Bayview Avenue
Sunnyvale, CA  94086

It's going to be *party* time!

jsb@actnyc.UUCP (The Invisible Man) (05/29/88)

I would like to propose that future I.Q. tests include the following
question:
"Is it appropriate to post articles asking for money on the net?"
I suspect a 'No' answer to this question would correlate highly with intelegence
thus adding to the reliability of I.Q. measurement.  However:

In article <11148@apple.Apple.Com> grady@apple.UUCP (Grady Ward) writes:
)Recently on the net I've seen a few messages asking for money.  The 
)senders supply such worthy reasons as education, feeding a starving 
)sister, and so on.
)
)Taking advantage of this trend, I would like to ask you all for money, 
)too.
)
	[ discriptions of the good fortune of the Grady Bunch deleted. ]

)Less than a year ago, I founded a Hi-IQ club which now has over 130 
)members around the world, 

I got a recent copy of the society's newsletter (Grady will send you one
if you ask) and, aside from an interesting short piece by weemba, I find
talk.bizarre better written and more informative.  Well, maybe I mean 
more written and better informative?  One article that particularly
bothered me in this journal, a discussion of possible gender bias in I.Q.
measurement, ends by saying that "only time and extensive research will prove"
whether or not, if a cognative "difference exists" beteween men and women,
"... it [can] truly be used as a marker of superiority in the hierarchical 
ranking of peoples".  Sounds bizarre to me.  If one rates high enough in
the hierarchical ranking of peoples, one is entitled to disrupt newsfroups
at will asking for spare change.  Since I rate really high in the h.r. of p.
too, I am continuing the disruption by not removing any of the froups of the
original posting.  Any of you folks who also rate high in the h. r. are invited
to join me.  And bring your lawn darts.

-- 
		"Notitiae gratia notitiarum"
				jim (uunet!actnyc!jsb)