“Introduced in the House on May 17 by Rep. Dale E. Kildee, D-Mich., and co-sponsored initially by Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., chair of the House Financial Services Committee which oversees coinage legislation, the bill also picked up the support on June 11 of Rep. Michael Castle, R-Del., widely acknowledged as among the most knowledgeable members of Congress on coinage matters.”
I suppose not. “Widely acknowledged as among the most knowledgeable” is not a phrase commonly associated with this site.
jason330
September 27, 2007,
Huh?
Get to your point, man! Spit it out for godsake!
Arthur Downs
September 28, 2007,
Perhaps an episode on “The Simpsons” summed it up when Lisa said: “You can turn (the s-buck)it in for real money”.
I did see an ad in the N-J that was pushing those ‘golden’ Presidential Dollars in a big way. The ad was rather misleading with the term ‘.999’ repeated several times. After shipping and handling, you could get 50 coins for a little more than $110. Banks sell the rolls of 25 for $25 each in a rare display of honesty (for banks).
“Introduced in the House on May 17 by Rep. Dale E. Kildee, D-Mich., and co-sponsored initially by Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., chair of the House Financial Services Committee which oversees coinage legislation, the bill also picked up the support on June 11 of Rep. Michael Castle, R-Del., widely acknowledged as among the most knowledgeable members of Congress on coinage matters.”
I suppose not. “Widely acknowledged as among the most knowledgeable” is not a phrase commonly associated with this site.
Huh?
Get to your point, man! Spit it out for godsake!
Perhaps an episode on “The Simpsons” summed it up when Lisa said: “You can turn (the s-buck)it in for real money”.
I did see an ad in the N-J that was pushing those ‘golden’ Presidential Dollars in a big way. The ad was rather misleading with the term ‘.999’ repeated several times. After shipping and handling, you could get 50 coins for a little more than $110. Banks sell the rolls of 25 for $25 each in a rare display of honesty (for banks).
but their not “minty” fresh from the bank!