[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

RE: your romance ad in USSR Iv S A U@| Ol (Unverified)



"Anonymous" mail has no place on the net.  Anonymous mail is sent by 
cowards.  I don't question your noble intent and it doesn't matter what 
the content is, this is still inappropriate use of email.  This is junk 
mail to me and anyone else on the Who lists.  It has nothing to do with 
the Who.  If I like the Who, then why would I be interested in 
mail-order brides?  Save your excuses.  Just don't do it anymore.

Jon
----------
>From:  <David@wishes.to.remain.anonymous.UA>
>To:  <thewho@cisco.com>;  <thewho-digest@cisco.com>;  <4d@natural.com>;
><barry-manilow@natural.com>;
><barry-manilow-digest@natural.com>
>Subject: your romance ad in USSR
>
>                             Iv S   A U@| Ol (Unverified)
>Date: Wednesday, July 05, 1995 9:19PM
>
>
>       ##    meet women of the former USSR through romance ads    ##
>
>     Months ago, Olga Kosmina placed my personal ad in several papers of the
>former Soviet Union.  Since that time I have received over 40 responses for
>the $50 I mailed Olga.  (I believe she paid the newspapers something around
>$35 and kept the rest for her efforts.)
>     I have found greater success and savings by placing my own personal
>romance advertisement rather than purchasing addresses through Russian "bride"
>catalog companies.
>     If you are interested in placing a personal romance ad as I did, contact
>Olga.  She has built up a list of most every newspaper and magazine in the
>former Soviet Union and could help direct your ad to certain areas if you
>wish.  She writes, "please say that I place all ad _throughout_ Russia and
>other countries of former Soviet Union, not only Western Russia."
>     Olga is 23 years old, has a bachelors in biology and works full-time as a
>florist in Kiev.  She speaks, reads and writes English as well as her native
>languages of Russian and Ukrainian.
>     I realize that it is a very trusting person who would put $ into an
>envelope and mail to a foreign country.  If you would rather send a letter of
>inquiry first, Olga will respond to your questions.  It takes about 16 days
>for a letter to travel from the USA to Kiev.
>
>Olga Kozmina
>Dekabristov Street 5 - 178
>Kiev 253121
>Ukraine
>
>     I have found that by placing a single bill between two pieces of
>newsprint inside an envelope, the Ukrainian post cannot see through and does
>not bother to tamper.  I have yet to lose a letter sent to Kiev.  I am sorry
>that Olga does not have e-mail because it would make contact with her much
>easier.
>     I am posting anonymously because of the inordinate amount of e-mail which
> I would receive -- inquiries as well as flames.
>
>Best Wishes,
>
>David and Olga
>
>     Although Olga has never seen a newsgroup nor heard of "net-etiquette,"
>she believes that helping others exceeds the cost of angering those who feel
>the net should not be used in this fashion.
>     IHA (I humbly ask) that you not flame the postmaster of this site.
>
>peace. . .
>