Hi there,
If anyone is interested in voting behavior, elections or coalition governments,
please, let me now.
Thanks,
Ignacio Urquizu-Sancho
iurquizu(a)latte.harvard.edu
Hi there,
If anyone is intersted in military conflict/war and it's impact on health
globally and/or nationally, let me know.
Thanks!
Marie
mcole(a)fas.harvard.edu
Hey guys,
If anyone is interested in working on a paper dealing with the United
Nations (esp. the Security Council), or dealing with some other topic in
international security or international organizations, please let me know.
Thanks,
Matt
Please note: Our list is a closed list (only members can post), to cut down
on spam.
Thus, if you gave me your *.harvard.edu address on Monday, that's the
address that's subscribed to the list, and you can only send email to the
list from that address.
Thanks!
(And Allan has a good point -- you should definitely install g77 and gcc
before attempting to install R!)
----- Original Message -----
From: "Allan Friedman" <allan.friedman(a)gmail.com>
To: <gov2001-l(a)lists.fas.harvard.edu>
Sent: Wednesday, September 22, 2004 11:58 AM
Subject: R on Suse
> On the off chance that any of you are running Suse linux, you can save
> yourself a big hassle by instalingl the g77 fortran package _before_
> trying to install R.
>
> Also, if anyone out there is interested on collaborating on issues
> having anything to do with information technology, please email me.
>
> /\llan
>
> Allan Friedman
> PhD Student, Public Policy
> Kennedy School of Government
>
>
Hi everyone. The first message like this we send out never makes any
sense, since what the main content is: if you don't get this, please let
us know.
I also have one substantive point: the syllabus says something about
looking for data today. What I really would like you to do soon, and
we'll talk about this in class next week, is to begin making coauthor
arrangements and to start thinking about the paper. As you'll see when
you have a look at the handout on the papers (see
http://gking.harvard.edu/papers/papers.html), this means that you should
first find a published article to start from, and then to find the data
necessary to replicate it. You shouldn't start by finding data without
the article; that comes second. In any event, you can wait until Monday
if you like, but it would be best to get started then.
Remember also: if you have questions about class, pls send them to this
list.
Gary