Sorry, Mr. Gilder, No Excuses Well, as MetaMarkets analyst sean Donovan wrote yesterday, Mr. gilder s oped piece reads like an apology. Or perhaps, if not an apology, then an excuse. http://www.theindustrystandard.com/article/0,1902,28512,00.html
Extractions: George Gilder is right when he blasts U.S. telecom policy, but his charges sound like excuses for his poor investment performance. Yesterday the Wall Street Journal ran an extraordinary op-ed piece by George Gilder, called "Tumbling into the Telechasm." In it, the celebrated author of Telecosm and the publisher of the Gilder Technology Report lists all the federal government's catastrophic policy blunders that led to today's technology depression, a devastating bill of wrongs. Gilder indicts deflationary monetary policy. He blasts socialistic telecommunications regulatory policy. He savages Internet tax policy. He eviscerates anti-competitive antitrust enforcement policy. And he is dead right on all counts. These are important truths that absolutely must be spoken. The shame of it is that no one takes George Gilder's views on these matters seriously. And so Gilder's brilliant counterblast is likely to sink without leaving so much as a ripple.
The Statesman Actors from the London Stage from left to right sean gilder, Alexandra Lilley, Suzanne Both Radford and fellow actor sean gilder admit to not completely http://www.utahstatesman.com/news/2001/10/12/Features/London.Actors.Bring.Shakes
Extractions: var story_id = 117038; var sectionname = 'Features'; var sectioncategory = 'Other'; var isectioncategoryid = '8,'; showNetworkBanner(11); document.write(currentissuedayname + ', ' + currentissuemonthname + ' ' + currentissueday + ', ' + currentissueyear); Home Features Issue date: Section: Features Media Credit: Courtesy of Laurie Asprey Actors From the London Stage has returned to Logan after such a good reception last year. The company employs many actors and brings shows and workshops from England to campuses and communities all across the United States. The company was started by actor Patrick Stewart, best known for his work as Captain Picard on Star Trek: The Next Generation, when he was asked to stay and speak to students after a performance at a university.