(Including 1 for the President)
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4868 Tomorrow is “tax day.” If, like the President or Vice President, your
2003 income was $700,000 or $800,000, it is a day to celebrate your tax
savings. There are a lot of tough questions to ask about the
war, but one great thing about it – at least for the rich – is that it’s
free. And then some. It’s not too late to fund your Roth IRA for 2003 –
or even to set one up. You have one more
day. Hie on
down to your local bank. It’s also not too late to file Form 4868 for an automatic tax-day
extension to August 16. Let it never be
said this site failed to provide you with an excuse to procrastinate. 13N6705 Bob
Fyfe: “After reading your comment yesterday, I wondered how difficult it would be to order your
Thinkpad part away from IBM. I found this website
within a few seconds using a Google search on 13N6705. The company is Advanced Computer
Services. And although I know nothing
about them, it turns out that they have the part in stock, it’s only $175
(to IBM’s $280), they don't charge sales tax outside of Ohio (you'd have
to take care of that yourself with your state), and ground shipping is $8-12
depending on your location (other options are available).” F Now, why didn’t I think of that? Googling a part
number – for anything, by any manufacturer – very often snaps it right up onto
your screen, sometimes at an advantageous price. (Here’s
another place I could have found it, a site apparently dedicated to ThinkPads.) Alan
Questell found it for $154 here
on eBay. “But scroll down the page,” he
advises, “because you need to buy it as a 2nd hard drive. I'd suggest the 60GB Travelstar
for a little more money...it's faster (7200 rpm vs. 5400). By the way, most laptops now use 2.5 inch
drives, so the actual hard drives are interchangeable; it's the caddy (that you
slide into the computer) that's different. You can find those separately on eBay
and put it together yourself or just find someone who's selling the whole unit.” 0 This was the number of mistakes President Bush was
able to think of at his press conference last night when asked to name the worst one he had made during his
presidency. He did acknowledge that he
must have made some – he was not trying to say he had not – just that, under
this pressure, and not having covered the question in rehearsal, he couldn’t come
up with one on the spur of the moment.
One can agree with much of what the President said
about If you had
been 13 days from assuming responsibility for the safety of your nation, and been told
in the key, formal, about-to-hand-off-power, pre-Inaugural briefing by the head
of the CIA, that your country faced a "tremendous," "immediate" threat, would you have ignored it and focused, instead,
on tax cuts and star wars missile defense and plans to invade Iraq? (Could this have qualified as that elusive mistake the President was trying in vain to conjure up last night?) My point is that you don’t have to favor abandoning
© 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 Andrew Tobias