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From the FAQ: Subject: 96)! What is this link problem with libXmu on SunOS 4.1.[23]? In SunOS 4.1.2 Sun fixed a shared-library bug in ld which conflicts with the way X builds the shared Xmu library, causing these symbols, notably, to be undefined when building some X11 clients: _get_wmShellWidgetClass _get_applicationShellWidgetClass Compiling "-Bstatic -lXmu -Bdynamic" appears to work. To solve the problem if you are using OpenWindows 3.0 (X11R4-based Xt), please contact your local Sun office and request the following patches: Patch i.d. Description 100512-02 4.1.x OpenWindows 3.0 libXt Jumbo patch 100573-03 4.1.x OpenWindows 3.0 undefined symbols when using shared libXmu [Greg Earle, earle@Sun.COM; 7/92] A source patch for use with the MIT X11R4 libraries was developed by Conrad Kimball (cek@sdc.boeing.com); it retrofits into R4 some fixes made in R5 to get around this problem. The patch is on export in [1/93] contrib/X11R4_sunos4.1.2_patch_version3.Z
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{Stuff Deleted} {Stuff Deleted} {More Stuff Deleted} My neighbor runs a Viper(R) distributorship and installs them on all Saturns sold in my area (Anne Arundel County, MD). He has an SC with the Viper voice alarm installed. The alarm does everything, turn on the car, the radio, the heater, roll down windows, unlock the doors... The alarm goes off more frequently on hot days when a person walks by. It gets sensitive up to about 5 feet in 85degree heat. It isn't as bad as convetional siren alarms, because it doesn't continue to wail, it just says "Protected by Viper, please stand back!" And shuts up... (mainly because the person walks away befuddled!!!")
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Does anyone know where to get a schematic for a micro stepping circuit? Any help would be appreciated. mcole@nmsu.edu
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After a tip from Gary Crum (crum@fcom.cc.utah.edu) I got on the Phone with "Pontiac Systems" or "Pontaic Customer Service" or whatever, and inquired about a rumoured Production Hold on the Formula Firebird and Trans Am. BTW, Talking with the dealer I bought the car from got me nowhere. After being routed to a "Firebird Specialist", I was able to confirm that this is in fact the case. At first, there was some problem with the 3:23 performance axle ratio. She wouldn't go into any details, so I don't know if there were some shipped that had problems, or if production was held up because they simply didn't have the proper parts from the supplier. As I say, she was pretty vague on that, so if anyone else knows anything about this, feel free to respond. Supposedly, this problem is now solved. Second, there is a definate shortage of parts that is somehow related to the six-speed Manual transmission. So as of this posting, there is a production hold on these cars. She claimed part of the delay was not wanting to use inferior quality parts for the car, and therefore having to wait for the right high quality parts... I'm not positive that this applies to the Camaro as well, but I'm guessing it would. Can anyone else shed some light on this? Chris S. -- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Chris Silvester | "Any man capable of getting himself elected President chriss@sam.amgen.com | should by no means be allowed to do the job" chriss@netcom.com | - Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
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[...etc...] I am becoming increasingly convinced that most of us take Paul's illustration about one body / many parts far too narrowly. It is easy to say that the one body represents a particular sect of Christianity (generally our own), and the parts are clearly the various offices of ministry. There is a place for that. But having met people who are walking closeely with God in a wide variety of doctine - Catholic, Protestant, liberal, conservative, Orthodox, etc. - I am willing to encompass a wide spectrum of views within the context of the 'body of Christ.' And I am equally sure that one day, after we shug off this mortal coil, when we no longer see through a glass darkly but see clearly, face to face, we will all be ashamed at some of the things we held as truth. We ought all fellowship, worship, and serve where we are called, and understand that where we are called may not be where everyone else is called. One of the fathers of the reformation (help me out - can't recall the name) put it quite succiently: In essentials, unity. In nonessentials, liberty. In all things, charity. While I agree with Lewis (Mere Christianity) that calling oneself a Christian implies some basic, fundamental standards of belief if the word is to mean anything at all, I think most of us define the bounds of essentials a bit too broadly, deny the place for liberty in questionable issues near those bounds, and ignore the requirements of charity all together. Me? I attend a Vineyard church, speak in tongues, am effectively an inerrantist, though I'll grant some inaccuracy in translation, am moderately pre-mill, and evangelical. But, I'm not ready to damn those who use icons, say mass in latin, uphold the Virgin Mary (though I really don't believe that she was sinless), vote on Church membership, or insist on baptism for salvation. Of course, I think my doctine is pretty close to the truth - why would I follow it if I believed something else was closer to the truth? But my understanding of the reality of a walk with Christ is continually evolving as I spend more and more time walking with Him, studying His word, and fellowshiping with others in the (often extended) family. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ I read, much of the night, and go south in the winter. --T.S. Eliot, The Waste Land .............................................................................. s.w. marlatt, <>< & *(:-) Prov. 25.2 University of Colorado: marlatt@spot.Colorado.edu 492-3939 National Center for Atmospheric Research: marlatt@neit.cgd.ucar.edu 497-1669
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Dunno, the newpaper article I read didn't say (I was wondering the same thing). I rather doubt it...
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Hey! If you can get it together, I'm all for it! I too am one of the poor (a college student) Get a bank account set aside, and set aside a big ass data base and you will get my contribution. I'm setting aside as of now 10$ a month. Not a slew of cash to be sure, but it's the best I can do. Let me know what you guys come up with. I'm sure as hell not going anywhere.
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Well, I'll avoid your question for now (got some learnin' to do) with a promise to come back with more info when I can find it. I _do_ know that BATSE is the primary instrument in the development of the all-sky map of long-term sources. Given that fact, and the spacecraft attitude knowledge of approx. 2 arcmin, we might be able to figure out how well BATSE can determine the location (rotational) of a Gamma Ray burster from knowledge of the all-sky map's accuracy. PR material for the other three instruments give accuracies on the order of "fractions of a degree", if that's any help. Speaking of GRO, the net-world probably was happy to see that the preps for orbit adjust appear to be going well. Our branch guy who's helping out says that things have gone smoothly with the iso-valve preps and the burns will take place in mid-June. Anyway, I'm off to find out more. 'Be back when I get some info.
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Right on Keith, err, Kent. Whadda you mean, you didn't see the smiley? /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ Bob Beauchaine bobbe@vice.ICO.TEK.COM They said that Queens could stay, they blew the Bronx away, and sank Manhattan out at sea.
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Ron, you are absolutely right. Not all kidney stones have calcium and not all calcium stones are calcium-oxalate. But the vast majority are calcium- oxalate. Calcium is just one piece of the puzzle. I cited that NEJM article as a way of pointing out to some of the physicians in this group that conventional wisdom is used in medicine, always has been and probably always will be. If one uses conventional wisdom, there is a chance that you will be wrong. As long as the error is not going to cause a lot of damage, what's the big deal(why call a physician who gives anti-fungals to sinus suffers or GI distress patients a quack?). On the kidney stone problem. I'd want a mineral profile run in a clinical chemistry lab. Balance is much more important than the dietary intake of calcium. I know that you use an electrical conductance technique to measure mineral balance in the body. I know that you don't think that the serum levels for minerals are very useful(I agree). If I can get a good nutritional assessment lab setup where I can actually measure the tissue reserve for minerals, I'd like to do a collaborative study with you to see how your technique compares with mine.
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: : >It's quite possible that a buyer and seller will both : >trust some third party more than either trust the other, and : >will desire the moderation of that third party. But if a random : >third party assumes the right to interfere in a transaction contarary : >to the wishes of the primary participants, odds are pretty good the : >results will be detrimental. : : So we try to ensure that the process of deciding whether to introduce : third parties isn't random. As Steve said above, there are examples : where third parties *are* less ignorant or corrupt than the two : primary parties; should this knowledge not be able to help? : A third party should be able to use persuasion to sway the transaction. If, on the other hand, we condone the use of force or threat of violence by the third party, then we are in trouble. A fourth party could say that it knows better than parties 1, 2, and 3. And a fifth party... and so on. Who wins? The one that can use the force or threat of force the best. In other words "Might makes right." Let's abandon such aggressive tactics and work from voluntary cooperation and respect from others. That is what libertarians want.
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Another pair of suggestions: 1. Remove the Balk rule. It is the runners responsibility to stay "safe" no matter what the pitcher does. 2. If a pitcher throws to an occupied base more than X time (X = 3 to 5) without successfully picking off the runner, the runner advances a base as if walked. This last suggestion will probably increase the number of stolen bases considerably. Suppose the pitcher uses up (N-1) of his N pick-off attempts. The runner can probably stretch his lead off the base, given that there will be extra pressure on the pitcher to get it right this time. Would this suggestion apply to pick-off attempts per pitch, per batter, or per base runner (on the same base)? -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Dr. Edward J. Baranoski MIT Lincoln Laboratory "It's got to be the going, Rm. J-118D, PO Box 73 not the getting there that's good" Lexington, MA 02143 --Harry Chapin, from "Greyhound" (617)981-0480
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Does System 7.X support all SCSI CD ROM drives? Or are specific drivers needed for each different make/model? Specifically, I'm looking at getting a NEC CDR-25, mainly because they are cheap. I know its a slow drive, but multimedia isn't my interest. I mainly want it for extracting software distributed on CD. Will I need to get a specific driver to use this drive on a Mac? thanks...Charles
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Anyone have a price quote/vendor for the vx to centris 650 upgrade? I've been quoted a price of $2401 till August 15th after which it will cost $2732. This of course doesn't include the trade-in rebate of $1300 for the vx board. Thus for $1101 one gets a Centris 650, 8 meg onboard with both the FPU and Ethernet. Anyone else have any info? This price is from the University of Illinois micro-order center, are there any other vendors who offer similar prices? johann
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Subject: Re: PLEASE! SHOW UP IN WASHINGTON DC FOR BOSNIA (MAY 15th) From: Nick Jovanovic, jovanovic-nick@yale.edu Date: 12 May 1993 17:19:43 -0400 No, I'm not claiming 2,000,000 have been killed. We are in the middle of the genocide process that Mr. Major has given yet another "green light" to. Mladic seems to have most of what he wants, but Boban is just getting his appetite whetted. Because Mladic refuses to allow international observers to inspect mass-grave sites and killing centers in places like Foca, Brcko, and Visegrad, it will be years before we have an accurate account of the number killed. In practical terms, it would be impossible to kill all 2,000,000. There just isn't the kind of machinery of crematoria and gas chambers and transportation lines that the Nazis took 8 YEARS to develop. And remember, the Nazis killed minorities in the countries they occupied. To actually kill 42% of the population requires extreme genocidal organization. But I do claim that the goal of the genocide is the systematic annihilation of Bosnian Muslim culture, by killing as many as is feasible, by rape, by torture, by the demolition of mosques, libraries, and culture artificts, the burning and renaming of villages, the shelling of civilians. So that there won't be any of the 2,000,000 or so Muslims whose lives have not been shattered by the genocide, though they still may be alive. And Mr. Major not only finds this acceptable, he helps it along by making sure that the victims don't have arms to defend themselves. Mike.
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Exactly... I didn't want to mess with tga or rle. So I wrote the following script. All you need is the very standard set of pbm utilities. This script is a .pov to .jpg converter. Just run it like this: pov2jpg 1280 1024 fred.pov You will need to modify the path's in the script to reflect where you put povray and its include files. If you have a problem with disk space, you can use named pipes instead of temporary files. I hope you find it useful... ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- #!/bin/sh if [ $# -lt 3 ] ; then echo "usage: $0 width height sourcefile.pov other_options" exit fi width=$1 height=$2 datafile=$3 shift 3 #basedatafile=`echo $datafile | sed -e "s/\(.*\)\.pov/\1/"` thedatafile=`basename $datafile` basedatafile=`basename $datafile .pov` dirdatafile=`dirname $datafile` cd $dirdatafile /afs/rnd.sas.com/u/sherman/pov/povsrc/build/povray \ +l/afs/rnd.sas.com/u/sherman/pov/povscn/include \ +o/tmp/data$$ +w${width} +h${height} +fr +i${thedatafile} $* echo " " rawtopgm $width $height < /tmp/data$$.grn > /tmp/green$$ rawtopgm $width $height < /tmp/data$$.red > /tmp/red$$ rawtopgm $width $height < /tmp/data$$.blu > /tmp/blue$$ rgb3toppm /tmp/red$$ /tmp/green$$ /tmp/blue$$ | cjpeg > ${basedatafile}.jpg rm /tmp/red$$ /tmp/green$$ /tmp/blue$$ /tmp/data$$.grn /tmp/data$$.red \ /tmp/data$$.blu echo "Wrote output to ${basedatafile}.jpg" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Give me a call when you build a working model. Then we'll talk stock options. --- Private note to Jennifer Fakult. "This post may contain one or more of the following: sarcasm, cycnicism, irony, or humor. Please be aware of this possibility and do not allow yourself to be confused and/or thrown for a loop. If in doubt, assume all of the above.
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FOR SALE FTP software, Inc. PC/TCP (Networking Software for DOS) Version 2.04 (***) with LAN driver for 3c503 cards, others you can get from FTP itself, serial numbers, orignal diskettes., TCP/IP telnet/ftp/ping/lpr/finger etc....
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There is no data to show chromium is effective in promoting weight loss. The few studies that have been done using chromium have been very flawed and inher ently biased (the investigators were making money from marketing it). Theoretically it really doesnt make sense either. The claim is that chromium will increase muscle mass and decrease fat. Of course, chromium is also used t o cure diabetes, high blood pressure and increase muscle mass in athletes(just as well as anabolic steroids). Sounds like snake oil for the 1990's :-) On the other hand, it really cant hurt you anywhere but your wallet, and place bo effects of anything can be pretty dramatic... -Paul ---------------------------------------------------------- | Paul Sovcik, Pharm.D. U of Illinois College of Pharmacy | | | | Email- U18183@UICVM.UIC.EDU | | |
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Sperm deposited near the entrance of the vagina has been known to cause pregnancy, even in the presence of a hymen. I doubt that sperm could make it through a layer of cloth then find the right path to a waiting ovum, but it might be possible. So, it is possible for a woman to be both virgin and pregnant. Also, some hymens are sufficiently loose to allow near-normal intercourse without rupturing. The problem when investigating these phenomenae is, of course, getting an honest account of what exactly happened.
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The answer is - they're stupid. Seriously, I think you're right on the money; I've never understood the preoccupation with making sure a rotation has left-handed starters. The only time it makes sense to me is when you have an unbalanced schedule and your main rival(s) is loaded with lefthanded hitters. Other than that, I think you're completely right.
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Post all you want, foreigner. We'd rather hear from you than those "I'll support the fascist who writes the hecks for my salary" .edu site types! Should you expect the Police to come in and assault you, lay siege and refuse to help when they (yes, let's give them the benefit of the doubt) accidently burn down your ranch home? Even though ey have emergency vehicles nearby? Is this a proper response when you just keep to yourself? Even if you DON'T hurt anyone? And you 're cooperative with cops when you occasionally come out?
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Well then given your definition of "best" is it not conceivable that Alfredo Griffin could bring something to a team that that team needs to win while Larkin might not have that something the team needs? Would Griffin then be better than Larkin? No, I am not trying to define the quality of an individual, at least not for the purpose of ranking them. Toronto won with Olerud. They might have won with Fielder. They might not have won with Thomas. Detroit might have won with Thomas. Chicago might have won with Fielder. You can't rank these individuals. You can only look at who might contribute more to the team effort, which is winning the WS. Thomas could not have contributed to that goal any more than Olerud so I cannot say that Olerud is less of a player. --
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What a lie..!!?? Ask the victims of the Nazis. Don't take the Bosnian muslims' word for it. Ask the Holoucost survivors who helped them, you will hear that the Bosnian muslims (among others) helped them. I also do object to the term ethnic cleansing, since what is happening in Bosnia is not ethnic cleansing, they all have the same ethnicity, what is different is religion. they are Orthodox christians, Catholic christians, and Muslims. It's religious cleansing. Also watching people being rounded up and slaughtered by the slitting of the throat, raped collectively and systematically, driven out of their homes by the millions (!!!!), tortured in concentration camps, maimed and ..... does indeed amount to moral rape. Nothing in the history justifies what's happening.
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Hallo ! ebosco@us.oracle.com wrote on 28.04.93 about : emm386 and windows e>Von : ebosco@us.oracle.com (Mi, 28.04.93 18:03) e>Name: Eric Bosco [...] e>Should I use emm386 or should I remove it from my config.sys? Basically: Windows prefers extendend memory instead of expanded (more work to do for Win) and if no application desperatly needs EMS, you should leave emm386 with a "REM" in your config.sys. Bye, Chris
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Teflon? A contribution from the space program? Since the French were using Teflon on household items in the early 1950's, it is unlikely that it was invented by NASA. As for pacemakers and calculators, again those are anecdotally connected with NASA.
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As distributed, twm thinks everything with three or more colormap cells must be a colour screen. Here's a patch to have it use the screen's visual class. *** twm.c.DIST Wed May 12 14:56:55 1993 --- twm.c Wed May 12 15:47:53 1993 *************** *** 343,352 **** --- 343,384 ---- Scr->XORvalue = (((unsigned long) 1) << Scr->d_depth) - 1; + #ifdef oldCode if (DisplayCells(dpy, scrnum) < 3) Scr->Monochrome = MONOCHROME; else Scr->Monochrome = COLOR; + #else + { XVisualInfo template; + XVisualInfo *visualInfo; + int nitems; + + template.visual = DefaultVisual(dpy, scrnum); + template.visualid = XVisualIDFromVisual(template.visual); + template.screen = scrnum; + visualInfo = XGetVisualInfo(dpy, VisualIDMask|VisualScreenMask, + &template, &nitems); + if (nitems == 1) { + switch (visualInfo->class) { + case StaticColor: + case PseudoColor: + case TrueColor: + case DirectColor: + Scr->Monochrome = COLOR; + break; + + default: Scr->Monochrome = MONOCHROME; + break; + } + } + else { + (void) fprintf(stderr, + "%d Visual match(es), assuming mono\n", + nitems); + Scr->Monochrome = MONOCHROME; /* assume */ + } + } + #endif /* setup default colors */ Scr->FirstTime = TRUE;
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When I was a school boy, my biology teacher told us of an incident in which a couple were very passionate without actually having sexual intercourse. Somehow the girl became pregnent as sperm cells made their way to her through the clothes via persperation. Was my biology teacher misinforming us, or do such incidents actually occur?
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of thier Eloquently, if somewhat shrilly, put. Well, why not? You have a way with words. And you sure get shrill on cue. Jim -- jmd@handheld.com
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^^-- name? Other than it tells quite a lot about the Man himself. Are you the spokesman for "most people?" That you don't recognize the Biblical commentary used. Those in the church know the language though, and have no such excuse. You missed the point -- which is that the Prophets, the Psalms, and Revelation, all together, provide a very rich view of a very special event -- a wedding. How are you able to make such a conclusion? Please note, that the first part of Revelation makes it clear that the address is to those in the church. That said, it doesn't hurt to try to see what the prophecies are ahead of time -- for those outside the church. So you say. It should be interesting to see what the investigators conclude, and what the final judgments are. So much for war and government eh. Very glad you asked, since I goofed -- it should be Philippian 1:14-19: (here from NIV) Because of my chains, most of the brothers in the Lord have been encouraged to speak the word of God more courageously and fearlessly. It is true that some preach Christ out of envy and rivalry, but others out of good will. The latter do so in love, knowing that I am put here for the gospel. The former preach Christ out of selfish ambition, not sincerely, supposing that they can stir up trouble for me while I am chains. But what does it matter? The important thing is that in every way, whether from false motives or true, Christ is preached. And because of this I rejoice. My comment stems from the realization that we who love the Lord, are human and imperfect. Whatever we "preach," no matter how eloquent, or how corrupted -- is of little difference. Those who know the Master's voice will recognize Him -- a gem-stone amidst rock. Such is also the lesson of the "stumblingblock." For those who have an ear to hear.
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What's that supposed to mean? She's 80 lbs. Understand english? 1/2 ;) She let wind break cause I fed her cheap food, and not the same thing every time. So she had to "adjust" to each different brand for a while.
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Source: Channel 4 News at 19.00, Monday 2 March 1992. 2 French journalists have seen 32 corpses of men, women and children in civilian clothes. Many of them shot dead from their heads as close as less than 1 meter. Source: BBC1 Morning news at 07.37, Tuesday 3 March 1992. BBC reporter was live on line and he claimed that he saw more than 100 bodies of Azeri men, women and children as well as a baby who are shot dead from their heads from a very short distance. Source: BBC1 Morning news at 08:12, Tuesday 3 March 1992. Very disturbing picture has shown that many civilian corpses who were picked up from mountain. Reporter said he, cameraman and Western Journalists have seen more than 100 corpses, who are men, women, children, massacred by Armenians. They have been shot dead from their heads as close as 1 meter. Picture also has shown nearly ten bodies (mainly women and children) are shot dead from their heads. Azerbaijan claimed that more than 1000 civilians massacred by Armenian forces. Serdar Argic
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You might as well have. You certainly would not have been in error if you would have.
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And I thought I knew a lot about serial devices. Perhaps I should just keep my big mouth shut. Sorry.
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I tried the AutoFom stuff on my 1991 Saturn SC, and was so disappointed with it that I returned it for a refund. I polished the car for 2 hours and couldn't remove the swirl marks/thin film that was all over the finish. It also attracted more dirt than without the stuff.
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Perry> NNTP-Posting-Host: wswiop15.win.tue.nl Perry> Perhaps you should try nic.funet.fi instead of funet.fi ??!?!? Another possibility is, that you did not give your email address as password for the anonymous account. If you that, you see following message: 230- 230-You entered an invalid/inpropable password, and are now accessing 230-restricted subset of files. Please read README for more information. 230-We have special access features, see file README 230 It was last updated Tue Apr 13 23:45:09 1993 - 9.4 days ago This can happen, if your terminal emulator does not generate the '@' character as you think (it is hard to see, since passwords are not echoed..).
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As the heading indicates, it is impossible for me to fathom why Barry is not batting 4th for the Giants behind Will Clark. Barry is such an awesome and consistent hitter -- definitely the best in the National League. IMHO, to have Williams, a streaky hitter (and not really a clutch hitter) batting 4th ahead of Bonds is simply an injustice to the Giants and fans of the Giants.
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Does anyone have one of these that would care to share some information on? I concerned about the turbo. How reliable is it? How's the gas milage. Please responde to me, not here. Thank you.
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With the recent demise of the Chicago Blawkhawks (much to my delight) I noticed their 8 (?) game playoff losing streak (4 to the Pens last year, and now 4 to the Blues) and I am wondering what the NHL record for consecutive losses is, if there even is one... I'm pretty sure that the Hawks have at least a 9 game losing streak, since they've had to have lost a series since their last championship (whenever that was) Basically, I need something else to rag on my Hawks-fan friend with :) Mike, the insomniaced
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hi all, Ive applied for the class of 93 at quite a number of schools (20) and have gotten 13 rejects, 4 interviews and 3 no responses. Any one know when the heck these people send out their acceptance letters? According to the med school admissions book theyre supposed to send out the number of their class in acceptances by mid March. Whats going on... I am losing my sanity checking my mailbox every day. Also does anyone have some useful alternatives in case i dont get in, i kind of looked into Chiropractic and Podiatry but they really dont interest me. Thanks.
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garrod@dynamo.ecn.purdue.edu (David Garrod) writes... It was on CBS yesterday. The explanation is reasonable enough. Then again, if the fire was accidental, why didn't more people get out? That's true. I think there were several Australians in the group as well. _____ _____ \\\\\\/ ___/___________________ Mitchell S Todd \\\\/ / _____/__________________________ ________________ \\/ / mst4298@zeus._____/.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'_'_'_/ \_____ \__ / / tamu.edu _____/.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'_'_/ \__________\__ / / _____/_'_'_'_'_'_'_'_'_'_'_'_'_'_'_/ \_ / /__________/ \/____/\\\\\\ \\\\\\
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This topic was beaten to death a year or so ago. The concrete is not the problem. Lead-acid batteries often fail from disuse (not being charged for a long time), but there's no way the concrete floor could be the cause of the problem.
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When I need a kick-butt God, or when I need assurance of the reality of truth, I pray to God the Father. When I need a friend, someone to put his arm around me and cry with me, I pray to Jesus. When I need strength or wisdom to get through a difficult situation, I pray for the Holy Spirit. I realize that the above will probably make some people cringe, but what can I say? I think the doctrine of the trinity is an attempt to reconcile Jesus being God and being distinct from God, as described in the Bible. I wonder if Jesus had been a Hindu how different the wording would be.
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: :I got the following today from Gary Risebrough and it worked fine: : :Excerpts from mail: 29-Apr-93 Re: ol{v}wm 3 virtual keybo.. :ITO2@aodc.gov.au (554) : :> I have : :> > OpenWindows.KeyboardCommands: Full :> > OpenWindows.VirtualGrabKeys : False : :> which seems to work. : Where can I find man pages about VirtualGrabKeys resource - it doesn't show up in my OpenWindows 3.0 man pages...
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I checked the FAQ on this first, and no luck.. I need to convert the R5 Tree widget for use with xview v3.0. The problem is the fact that xview uses their own event loop system, and I was wondering if anyone had any tips (or converted source) on converting these pups.
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I'm working on my senior project here at UF (florida). The project requires fractel trees. I'm interested in either psuedo or real code; just about anything will help. Perhaps some good books on the subject could help too. mail will reach at: quartz@iriquois.eel.ufl.edu
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\input amstex \documentstyle{amsppt} \pagewidth{6.5in} \magnification=1200 \pageheight{7.5in} \ \title {Letter to the Editor} \endtitle \author {Matthew L. Fante} \endauthor \date {April 20, 1993} \enddate \endtopmatter pull back the heavens and show you my anger?! ... fear me.'' The 51 day standoff between federal agents and the Branch Davidians ended on April 19 in what appeared to be a mass suicide by fire. Now that the multi-million dollar standoff is over, a few things remain: cleaning up the mess, and assigning blame. \ From the onset of the April 19 tear gas attacks by federal agents, President Clinton already started passing the buck by saying ``Talk to the attorney general or the FBI... I knew it was going to be done, but the decision was {\it entirely theirs}. {\it They} made the tactical decision.'' Enter Attorney General Janet Reno. After most of the Branch Davidians died, Reno said she took ``full responsibility'' for the decision. ``I approved the plan'' she said adding that she ``did not advise him [Clinton] as to the details.'' In fact, she told Clinton that it was ``the best way to go.'' As the fire was roaring through the Branch Davidian's compound Clinton said that he was ``deeply sadened by the loss of life'' and in the same breath that ``the law enforcement agencies involved in the Waco siege recommended the course of action pursued today.'' Later he went on to say ``I stand by that [Reno's] decision.'' \ How did this all begin? At 0930 on February 28 agents of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (BATF) launched a full-scale, high-profile assault on the Branch Davidian's compound. This raid was much more than an assault on a group suspected of possessing illegal weapons. The assault was a planned media circus used as a propaganda device of the BATF to show their might and just purpose. \ At the onset of the ``no-knock'' raid, gaggles of heavily armed BATF agents made their way inside the compound without identifying themselves or state that they had a warrant until long after the shooting began. Silently, the agents made their way to the compound's buildings and started their ``search'' by charging at the buildings and throwing concussion grenades and ordering the cult members to come out of the buildings. \ If unknown persons dressed in black ninja costumes and combat fatigues were to attack you, throwing grenades and brandishing firearms, would you not assume that these people are criminals and attempt to defend yourself? The tactics employed by the BATF provoked the battle. \ The initial assualt by the BATF was not successful. Unfortunately, lives were lost on both sides. But, had the assault been a success, the liberal media would have praised the BATF by showing the footage of BATF agents carting away a bunch of gun-wielding religious nuts. Of course, any violation of the cult's rights would have been overlooked and the media would proclaim America's fortune in having super-cop organizations like the BATF that can systematically ``take out'' terroristic groups such as the Branch Davidians. \ As far as I can see, the BATF and the FBI dropped the ball - just like Philadelphia did in the 1985 MOVE crisis which left 11 dead, 250 homeless, and a city block razed. It appears that the BATF has adopted the shoot-first tactic of no-knock raids to execute search warrants. Don't let the BATF convince you that the no-knock raid was justified. No-knock assaults make sense when looking for, say, drugs that can easily be hidden or disposed of in a few seconds. The BATF was looking for illegal weapons, not drugs that could be hidden or flushed down the toilet in a matter of a few seconds. What ever happened to ``This is the police! You are surrounded...''? {\it This policy of no-knock raids, by federal and local agencies, should be restricted}. Further, the use of military firepower against presumed innocent citizens is a very scary idea, and is why the Davidians were justified in using lethal force to ensure that their fourth ammendment rights [``the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures''] are not denied. \ \ \ \noindent Matthew L. Fante \newline \end -- ____________________________________________________________________ Matthew Fante mlf3@Lehigh.EDU For a good prime call 2^756839 - 1
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The above statement ignores reality. The BD WERE provoked. Damn, Phil. You must have seen a different tape of the initial raid than I did. Your `doorbell' happened to include lobbing percussion grenades and attempting to storm the compound through the windows. I can honestly say I have never seen a `doorbell' that works like that. THINK, man. The BATF are serving a warrant on someone who they feel might have illegal automatic weapons. If they expected, as you state, that `the B-D to be anything other than peaceful citizens' they could have sent one, maybe two agents up to the front door, knock, and attempt to serve the warrant on the person answering the door. Scenario one, that person lets them in to perform the search and no one gets hurt. Scenario two, the person answering the door pulls a weapon aand kills both officers. Now you have two dead BATF agents instead of four, the BATF knows exactly where they stand with regards to the BD and began to formulate a plan of action to arrest those responsible without harm to the innocent people/children within the compound. No, the stupidity was the attempt to serve the warrant SWAT style. Sure, do it within the law. The BATF is there to uphold the law, not circumvent it to fit their needs..... <><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><> Paul R. Busta Busta@vicki.enet.dec.com Salem, N.H. 603-894-3962
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I have a Sony 1304s whch I would like to hook up so that I get its power though my Quadra 800's power supply. ie, if I had an apple monitor, I could plug the monitor directly into the computer so that when I hit the power button the keyboard, both the monitor and computer go on, and when I shut down, both go off. Is there an extension cord type cable I can buy which allows me to plug my existing power cord into and then plug this "extension cable" into my Quadra? Any thoughts and comments would be appreciated, Thanks in advance, Derek ****************************************************************************** DEREK FONG * EMAIL: thewho@plume.mit.edu Dept. of Physical Oceanography * thewho@darla.whoi.edu
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A woman once told me her doctor told her that I could catch, asymptomatically, her yeast infection from her, then give it back to her, causing a relapse. Probably bogus, but if not, it's another reason to use latex...
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I haven't recognized any names from previous discussions, but I do notice that there are a few who blame Clinton for the actions of the BATF in Waco. Unless you felt the same way about what we did under Bush's *direct* command in Panama, it's just partisan whining. Which is what I expect most of it to be. I can see no way to condemn one and not the other. But I'm sure some Limbot will tell me how killing thousands of Panamanian civilians to serve an arrest warrant is much better than allowing 80 religious fanatics to commit suicide following a botched attempt by the BATF to serve a search warrant.
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The principle underlying these devices is a well establish principle in psychology called 'entrainment,' whereby external sensory stimuli influence gross electrical patterns of brain function. They are 'experimental' in that people experiment with them and they are _not_ widely (if at all) used in medicine for therapeutic purposes. Given the exception of TENS and similar units used for external electrical stimulation, usually for pain relief, not really a light and sound machine. They are _not_ experimental in the sense of a specific medical category to that effect, as with experimental drugs, as the FDA does not specifically regulate medical devices in the way it does pharmaceuticals. There are few reliable studies of therapeutic or enhancement effects for mind machines, other than those relaxation-related effects found with meditation or self-hypnosis as well. Reported benefits are mostly anecdotal and subjective so far, so it's hard to generalize about their potential value. A pretty good general non-technical introduction to a wide variety of these devices may be found in "Would the Buddha Wear a Walkman ?" Some interesting background material, names of suppliers, and capsule reviews of specific equipment. A more important question might be whether they have enough additional value to be worth investing in. 'Biofeedback' was found to be a legitimate and reliable effect experimentally under certain conditions, (in that it demonstrated that we can influence physiological processes previously considered purely autonomic) but never panned out as a particularly valuable therapeutic tool because of the skill level required and the subtlety and temporary nature of the effects in most cases. Maybe someone else has more, there used to be a whole mailing list devoted to mind machines, somewhere on the net. kind regards,
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PaintShop Pro for Windows is a fantastic product. It can handle TIFF, GIF, BMP, PCX, and many other formats, displaying them and converting between them. There is a shareware version of the program; I assume it's available in the Windows areas of the standard anonymous FTP locations (I'd try ftp.cica.indiana.edu). Log in as ftp, use your username as a password, and look for a program called PSP101.exe or something like that. I have the registered version, and the only major difference I can detect is that the unregistered version pops up a message when you start the program asking you to please register it. Once again, FANTASTIC software. Up to 24 bits, huge images, everything. -Brian
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There are several things in ITAR which have never been tested in court. The concensus appears to be: You could be arrested as an international arms trafficker. (You could, regardless of the state of the law, but there are some paragraphs which suggest you would be violating the law.) If it goes to court, the ITARs could be thrown out is incompatible with the First amendment; or the court could rule that "software" is "technical data" not subject to the ITARs; or the court could rule that the phrase "publicly available" as defined in the ITARs would apply, making it only subject to requiring a general export license; or, you could be prosecuted successfully for arms trafficing or espionage. General concensus among lawyers who have read the ITARs, is that one of the first two would occur.
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I have a question for y'all: I'm looking at an ad for the new 3.5" FAST SCSI-2 drives from Micropolis in the June, 1993, MacWorld. (I have seen similar ads for the IDE versions in IBM PC magazines) Well, the ad says that all three drives have a FAST SCSI-2 interface, but then it says that the DTR rate for each drive is 5 megabytes/second, *max*. How can this be? I thought that if a drive was to be FAST SCSI-2 it had to have a DTR of 10megs a second? (I am assuming the 5megs/sec claim by Micropolis is from the 512k cache. I admit that I would be very impressed if the drive can *read/write* data at 5megs a second!)
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Why? He, Reno, and the FBI got what they wanted -- a reminder of who is the boss in America -- the thugs who work for the government.
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Any idea on the price range of the Cyclone or the Tempest? (compared to current line of computers, where will the new ones fall in price) -- ============================================================================ KEEPER: Heh heh. Stop! What is your name? ARTHUR: It is Arthur, King of the Britons. KEEPER: What is your quest? ARTHUR: To seek the Holy Grail. KEEPER: What is the air-speed velocity of an unladen swallow? ARTHUR: What do you mean? An African or European swallow? KEEPER: What? I don't know that! Auuuuuuuugh! BEDEMIR: How do know so much about swallows? ARTHUR: Well, you have to know these things when you're a king you know.
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Just curious why floptical drives never seemed to catch on. Remember those 21 Mb disks that look and feel like 3.5" floppies? These drives are SCSI devices and can read and write both 720 Kb and 1.44/21 Mb disks. Sounds to me to be one great product for the PC market. Are the prices really that unaffordable compared to CD-ROMs which are currently not rewritable? I know about the new rewritable CDs and expect SONY to develop the first MDs for the computer. My question is: why isn't there any substantial interest in developing the flopticals? Just a thought.
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The Phillies have won two games back to back in extra innings. Last night's game was hard fought. The game in Chicago should have been a blow out. All in all these two games show a different Phillies team. In past seasons they tended to always be on the short end of 1 run games. I don't know how many times I saw them losing by only 1 run. If they were able to win most of those, they might have been more of a contending team. They are 3-0 so far in extra innings. And of course, they are 10-3.
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My brother purchased baseball tickets for Texas Rangers vs Toronto Bluejays in July, but he was unable to get vacation days to get there. Is anyone interested in purchasing the following: Arlington Stadium Arlington,Texas, Texas Rangers vs. Toronto Bluejays Thursday, July 22 Friday, July 23 4 tickets, section 103 "Helmet Night" $14 each 4 tickets, section 305 $14 each If you want them all, the total is $112.00 Please contact me over e-mail, or directly to my brother: Randy Hollister 19 Rosemont Lane Streator, IL 61364 815/672-5265 My brother would be eternally grateful for someone to purchase these tickets! Thank you!
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Whoa. Think twice, now, unless you want the same standards applied to hollowpoints... --
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I posted this May 12th: I got a few requests asking for a summary, so I'll attempt one here: Here's the ones I know of: Wind/U - Bristol Technologies Hunter SDK - Hunter Systems MainWin - MainSoft LIBWXM - Visual Solutions Hunter The company is going through some big changes. I expect to eventually see the Hunter SDK pop up with a new name. At the moment, it is difficult to get phone calls returned and otherwise obtain info. Hopefully they will post something about themselves once things settle down. Visual Solutions LIBWXM is a product that I just heard about. They don't yet support MDI or MFC. Libwxm was used to port VisSim, a mathematical modeling package. Does native Motif Widgets, like Wind/U from Bristol. Contact Carrie Lemieux at 508 392 0100 for more info. She's very helpful. MainSoft This translates Windows source to a Unix executable that can switch off between a Windows or Quasi-Motif look and feel at runtime. They skip the Xt and Xm (Motif) X toolkit levels and go straight to Xlib. They don't yet support MFC. They're at 415 896 0708. Bristol This company that seems to be on the right track. Wind/U uses Xlib/Xt/Xm to give a *real* Motif app. They seem to be doing the most work in trying to support things like DDE, Common Dialogs, and more on the horizon. My contact there is knowledgeable, responds to my email, and wrote an example program for me showing how to obtain X widgets from Windows handles. They're at 203 438 6969, or you can email info@bristol.com.
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What would you accept as sources? This very thing has been written in lots of books. You could start with Erich Fromm's _The Dogma of Christ_.
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There is a cartridge capping upgrade for older deskjet printers available from hewlett-packard. Older original deskjet and possibly deskjet 500 units may have a black plastic slide with rubber capping components in the cartrige parking area on the right side (viewed from front) of the printer. Newer printers have a gray or white plastic slide. The black plastic slide can allow your cartridge to dry out. There was and may still be information packaged with ink cartridges explaining the situation. HP placed a coupon for a free upgrade kit to modernize old deskjets to the new capping mechanism. I did this on my printer and did indeed find that the cartidges now last longer. I don't have the information handy. I suggest contacting your nearest HP service center for information on obtaining the kit. HP has upgrade kits that consist of electronics and mechanical components that vary depending on the starting level printer and the level to which you wish to upgrade. I upgraded my original desket to a dekjet 500. The kit was fairly expensive. You are likely better off selling your old printer and purchasing a new deskjet 500 now that prices have declined so much. Upgrading an original deskjet to 500 requires a fair amount of skill, but no soldering. Upgrading a deskjet plus to a 500 is involves swapping the processor card and changing a few minor parts. Contact your HP service center for further information. The PCL language used by Deskjets is considerably different from the PCL used by laser printers, especially the newer laser printers. The biggest problem is dumb laser drivers that send a raster end command after each scan line. This makes no material difference for lasers, but causes the deskjet to print the accumulated raster. As you might guess, the result is hideously slow printing. The new DOS Wordperfect print deskjet drivers are still guilty of this particular behavior. From the way Wordperfect works, this would not be easy to change. Windows Wordperfect works efficiently unless you use the DOS drivers instead of Windows'. The PCL4 dialect used in the Laserjet IIIP allows compression that permits a full page 300 dpi image to be rendered with only one megabyte of memory. An uncompressed image could be as large as about 909 Kbytes, but the printer needs about 300K of memory for its internal house-keeping. Laserjet IV models support banded printing that allows incrmental download of the image with compression in limited memory situations. Deskjet downloadable fonts are not compatible with laserjet fonts. A single page from a laserjet only requires about 20 seconds. This is faster than any but the most trivial printing from a deskjet printer. The presumption, of course, being that the laser printer has completed its warm-up cyle. Until ink chemistry is changed, wicking resulting in image deterioration is unavoidable. I won't use the word impossible, but matching laser quality output from a deskjet printer is unlikely. Chosing an appropriate paper type helps, but does not eliminate the problem. Laser printers are more wastful of energy and consumable components. HP does accept return of spent toner cartridges, mitigating the material waste problem to a degree. Energy waste could use more work. Warm-up times have decreased, allowing stand-by current consumption to be significantly reduced in the laserjet IV. Kyocera produces a laser print engine that employs an amorphous silicon imaging drum with a replacable toner system. The image drum is good for approximately 100K copies. It is a very nice print engine. I wish HP used the Kyocera engine. Kyocera also has a neat modular paper source and stacker system. The recommended duty cycle for a deskjet is significantly lower than any of HP's laser printers. The pick-up pressure rollers are subject to wear and I case confirm eventually do wear out. The usual symptom is that the printer becomes reluctant to feed paper. The paper feed is integrated in a transport mechanism that is a single part from HP service. Replacement cost for the transport is almost $200. The feed rollers are not separately replacable, though it would not be a difficult job for a competent technician. I have disassembled and reassembled the transport on my own printer. It depends upon the application which printer is best for you. If you only print 5 or 10 pages a day and are satisfied with the appearance of output, the deskjet is a very good choice. As noted, the deskjet 500 is my choice for personal use.
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I realy like this idea, it would be wonderfull to see such a big bright satelite on the night sky. I will even promise to try to buy whatever product it advertises to help this project. Please write to Space Marketing and encourage this project. I sadly dosent have enough money to invest in it. --
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My sig has nothing to do with cockiness. What you put in your sig has nothing to do with your article, as I learned back in the fall, the hard way. You mean 'butt' don't you? Not but :-) Sure you do -- what?????????? Two points, one what does r.s.b.c. have to do with hockey? Secondly, UMASS beat my Quakers??? Hello!!! Earth here, are you responding??? We're not in the Atlantic 10 (or 8 whatever you wanna call it), we're in the Big 10 now!!! The A-10 was too weak for my Lady Lions -- they had to go to a more challenging conference. It didn't pay off as the Big East showed them a thing or too, but I still posted on a regular basis and tracked all the women's scores with reviews throughout the tournament. It wasn't a reason to stop posting. :-) It's not over yet -- if anyone has a chance to come back in 4 games, I think Boston can do it, but I still see Buffalo winning in 6. Agreed -- they're playing tremendous hockey right now. Congatualtions on three straight Buffalo. It could very easily be 2-1 Boston, but Buffalo has come up tough and a little luck. (You never see a penalty in OT that doesn't have both sides involved in a playoff game. Never never never!)
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Cite source, please. --Mike
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funny, it seems to me that the stats major league and minor league handbooks, which are nothing BUT collections of statistics, are authored by "bill james and stats inc. (and howe, for the minor league handbook)". and i am not sure how the 1993 bill james player ratings book qualifies as a "book with statistics", while the elias analyst is a "statistics book". the analyst contains more stats, sure, but it also contains more dialogue. finally, the point was not about the word "statistics". it was about "money-grubbing". i don't see how anyone who has looked at the bill james player ratings book cannot consider him money-grubbing.
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2 Kenwood KS-H51 150-Watt Floor-standing speakers for sale Less than one year old. Brand new shape. $185.
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Where are your references? I have been unable to find studies that state that chromium "cures diabetese". It can reduce the amount of insulin you have to take. "High blood pressure" - I have never heard of this claim before. "... anabolic steroids" - I have also never heard of this claim before. Sounds like you are making things up and stretching the truth for God knows what reason. Did somebody piss you off at one time? I agree with you that chromium picolinate by itself isn't likely to make a fat person thin. But it can be the decisive component of an overall strategy for long-term weight control and make an important contribution to good health. It is important to exercise (11, 12) and also avoid fat calories (9, 10). Chromium picolinate has shown to reduce fat and increase lean muscle (1, 2, 3). I will not bore you with the statistics. You wouldn't believe these anyway. Chromium Picolinate is an exceptionally bioactive source of the essential mineral chromium. Chromium plays a vital role in "sensitizing" the body's tissues to the hormone insulin. Weight gain in the form of fat tends to impair sensitivity to insulin and thus, in turn, makes it harder to lose weight (4). Insulin directly stimulates protein synthesis and retards protein breakdown in muscles (5, 6). This "protein sparing" effect of insulin tends to decline during low calorie diets as insulin levels decline, which results in loss of muscle and organ tissue. By "sensitizing" muscle to insulin, chromium picolinate helps to preserve muscle in dieters so that they "burn" more fat and less muscle. Preservation of lean body mass has an important long-term positive effect on metabolic rate, helping dieters keep off the fat they've lost. Chromium picolinate promotes efficient metabolism by aiding the thermogenic (heat producing) effects of insulin. Insulin levels serve as a rough index of the availability of food calories, so it's not at all surprising that insulin stimulates metabolism (4, 7, 8). Note that I did not say that chromium picolinate increases metabolism. In summary, you need to change your life style in order to loose weight and stay healthy: A. Reduce dietary fat consumption to no more than 20% of calories. - Eating fat makes you fat. B. Increase dietary fiber - low in calories; high in nutrients. C. Get regular aerobic exercise at least 3 times a week - burn calories. D. Take chromium picolinate daily - lose fat; keep muscle References: 1. Kaats GR, Fisher JA, Blum K. Abstract, American Aging Association, 21st Annual Meeting, Denver, October 1991. 2. Evans, GW. Int J Biosoc Med Res 1989; 11: 163-180. 3. Page TG, Ward TL, Southern LL. J Animal Sci 69, Suppl 1: Abstract 403, 1991. 4. Felig P. Clin Physiol 1984; 4: 267-273. 5. Kimball SR, Jefferson LS. Diabetes Metab Rev 4: 773, 1988. 6. Fukugawa NK, Minaher KL, Rowe JW. et al. J Clin Invest 76: 2306, 1985. 7. Fehlmann M, Freychet P. Biol Chem 256: 7449, 1981 8. Pittman CS, Suda AK, Chambers JB, Jr., Ray GY. Metabolism 28: 333, 1979. 9. Danforth E, Jr. Am J Clin Nutr 41: 1132, 1985. 10. McCarty MF. Med Hypoth 20: 183, 1986. 11. Bielinski R, Schutz Y, Jequier E. Am J Clin Nutr 42:69, 1985. 12. Young JC, Treadway JL, Balon TW, Garvas HP, Ruderman NB. Metabolism 35: 1048, 1986.
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Yeah, but they probably included industries and educational institutions that uses mostly work stations (SUNs, DEC, IBM RS600... etc etc) Which turns monitor off if left untouched for 5 min. - Chung Yang
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Yes, I suppose that's true. Of course, notice I qualified with NEARLY every language :-). And there are missionaries out there who can speak every imaginable language AND dialect. But then, the fact that not all languages have a WRITTEN gospel lends no credence to the concept of "pentecost" type xenoglossolalia since most tongues occur not in these places of un-written language, but rather in churches full of people who do have a written language and a Bible in that language.
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If I prescribe itraconazole for a patient's sinusitis neither the AMA, FDA, State Licensing Board, nor ABFP will be knocking on my door to ask why. This is a specious argument. Among other things, how to evaluate new theories and treatments. Funny, I thought it meant "one who fraudulently misrepresents his ability and experience in the diagnosis and treatment of disease or the effects to be achieved by the treatment he offers" (Dorland's 27th). Certainly more precision than conveyed by "chronic yeast". The inability to discriminate between fraudulent or erroneous representations is far more frightening. It is fraud to promote a treatment where the evidence for it is either lacking or against it and the quacksalver knows so, or error if the honest practitioner doesn't know so. Failure to speak out against either bespeaks incompetency. May I reply - seriously - that if the practitioners and proponents of non-scientific medicine have left their minds so open that the parts of their brains that do critical evaluation have fallen out, they should learn to edit their newsgroup headers to conform to the existing hierarchy and divisions.
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I don't like the term "quack" being applied to a licensed physician David. Questionable conduct is more appropriately called unethical(in my opinion). I'll give you some examples. 1. Prescribing controlled substances to patients with no demonstrated need(other than a drug addition) for the medication. 2. Prescribing thyroid preps for patients with normal thyroid function for the purpose of quick weight loss. 3. Using laetril to treat cancer patients when such treatment has been shown to be ineffective and dangerous(cyanide release) by the NCI. These are errors of commission that competently trained physicians should not committ but sometimes do. There are also errors of omission(some of which result in malpractice suits). I don't think that using anti-fungal agents to try to relieve discomfort in a patient who you suspect may be having a problem with candida(or another fungal growth) is an error of commission or omission. Healers have had a long history of trying to relieve human suffering. Some have stuck to standard, approved procedures, others have been willing to try any reasonable treatment if there is a chance that it will help the patient. The key has to be tied to the healer's oath, "I will do no harm". But you know David that very few treatments involve no risk to the patient. The job of the physician is a very difficult one when risk versus benefit has to be weighed. Each physician deals with this risk/benefit paradox a little differently. Some are very conservative while others are more agressive. An agressive approach may be more costly to the patient and carry more risk but as long as the motive is improving the patient's health and not an attempt to rake in lots of money(through some of the schemes that have been uncovered in the medicare fraud cases), I don't see the need to label these healers as quacks or even unethical. What do I reserve the term quack for? Pseudo-medical professionals. These people lurk on the fringes of the health care system waiting for the frustrated patient to fall into their lair. Some of these individuals are really doing a pretty good job of providing "alternative" medicine. But many lack any formal training and are in the "business" simply to make a few fast bucks. While a patient can be reasonably assured of getting competent care when a liscenced physician is consulted, this alternative care area is really a buyer's beware arena. If you are lucky, you may find someone who can help you. If you are unlucky, you can loose a lot of money and develop severe disease because of the inability of these pseudo- medical professional to diagnose disease(which is the fortay of the liscened physicians). I hope that this clears things up David.
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^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ Me thinks thee dost protest too much.... 1/2 :-) He made no allegations, and specifically gave the seller the benefit of the doubt. He simply made the net aware of the fact that many of these seats are stolen, so watch out and ask questions when buying. That's good advice to follow when buying _anything_ from a third party, on the net or elsewhere. Touchy, touchy...
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If the children are not being fed, whose fault is that? You and I have plenty of food on our tables while others starve. Why is that? God gave us this earth to manage. I don't think we're doing a very good job of it. The only consolation I have for those suffering children is that they will be received into the kingdom of Heaven where they will never thirst and never hunger again. Peace be with you, Malcolm Lee :)
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Do we want to 'create jobs'? or do we want jobs created that are productive in our supply/demand economy? If your answer is the former then we can just round up all jobless people and pay them to build sandcastles in the desert. If you answer the latter then I fail to see how another bureaucracy produces anything.
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Okay, the earth has a magnetic field (unless someone missed something?) Okay if you put a object in the earth magnetic field, it produces electricty.. Now the question. Can you use electricity to power a space/low earth orbit vehicle? and i fyou can, can you use the magnetic field of the earth to power it?? Can the idea of a "dragless" satellite be used in part to create the electrical field? After all the dragless satellite is (I might be wrong), a suspended between to pilons, the the pilons compensate for drag.. I think I know what I want to say, just not sure how to say it.. A dragless satellite sounds interestingly enough liek a generator. == Michael Adams, nsmca@acad3.alaska.edu -- I'm not high, just jacked
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hi guys does anyone could tell me at which resolution can work this monitor of course it support 640x480 but at 800x600 and 1024x768 with a cirrus card it seems to don't work any clues?
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I recently got a Centris 610 4/230 on my desk. It's a vast improvement on my previous machine (a IIsi 5/40). However ..... I've encountered a problem with fonts .. Entries in a Filemaker 2.0 database which looked fine when printed from my previous mac using System 7.01 now look wierd ! Spacing between characters has increased greatly - causing lines to be truncated. I'm using plain and bold Helvetica in various sizes - the increase in character spacing seems to occur for all sizes and styles. I'm using a mixture of TrueType and Fixed-Size fonts - exactly as on my IIsi - when things worked perfectly. We've managed to get similar behaviour using Word 5.1. Apple UK adopted their usual "friendly" approach and told us to call our local dealer - God help us !! Any ideas ?? ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Dr Pete Edwards Department of Computing Science King's College University of Aberdeen Tel. +44 (0)224 272270/96 Aberdeen, AB9 2UE Fax +44 (0)224 273422 SCOTLAND Email pedwards@csd.abdn.ac.uk ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS: Pieces of plastic and metal, crudely fashioned to bear a limited, superficial resemblance to real flowers, but with no credible attempt to match their internal complexity in terms of form, function, or behavior. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: Really smart computers.
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It also goes like this: FED1: We need to listen into <mafia head/druglord/terrorist/BBS sysop>'s conversations but don't have probable cause for a tap. FED2: Who do we have a tap on? FED1: <some other enemy of the state>. FED2: So get the keys - we can always claim that phone's being used on the tapped line. There's got to be some way to associate an instrument with an individual or the state effectively has a tap, possibly not admissible (given the War on Drugs exceptions to the 4/5 ammendments, who knows) but none the less listenable tap on any phone.
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I use it all day every day (maintaining our ftp site and answering mail via support@qdeck.com), and I can honestly say that in the last few months I've never had my machine go down due to any sort of tcpip network manager instability. (Of course, I've crashed my machine quite a few times on purpose, during beta testing and that sort of thing, but the tcpip portion is quite stable...) However, keep in mind that DVX and the network managers are only going to be as stable as the software they sit on top of (so if your underlying network kernel is flakey, you can't expect DVX to be terribly stable...) It just goes as a window that has graphics drawn into it. (To vastly over-simplify what goes on, we just take the windows graphics API calls, and translate them directly to X-protocol; unfortunately, windows was not really written to be network-aware, so sometimes we see a speed penalty when an app does something stupid, like sending a big white bitmap to erase something rather than just drawing a white box; fortunately, that sort of thing is rare...) You need to run MS windows, which Word then runs inside. You could run multiple windows programs within the one WinX window, and windows has ways to automagically start winapps when you start windows, so in practice it's not really a major problem. I have my system set up so that I can run WinX, which automatically starts Word Full-screen (for windows), so I never see any part of windows but word...)
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I've caught myself doing it while on my bicycle. Does that count? Dean
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I'm looking for a pair of inline skates (aka roller blades) new or used for less than $60.00 including shipping. Size 11. Strider | SUNY @ Buffalo | psr@acsu.buffalo.edu Lord Mayor, The Hill People | (716) 636 4862 | V127MHSK@ubvms.bitnet "Son, I am able," she said, "though you scare me." "Watch," said I, "beloved." -- Strider | SUNY @ Buffalo | psr@acsu.buffalo.edu Lord Mayor, The Hill People | (716) 636 4862 | V127MHSK@ubvms.bitnet
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: However greatly we extoll Mary, it is quite obvious that she is in no : way God or even part of God or equal to God. The Assumption of our : Blessed Mother, meant that because of her close identification with the : redemptive work of Christ, she was Assumed (note that she did not : ASCEND) body and soul into Heaven, and is thus one of the few, along : with Elijah, Enoch, Moses (maybe????) who are already perfected in : Heaven. Obviously, the Virgin Mary is far superior in glorification to : any of the previously mentioned personages. As I said, it is a provocative thought. From "Answer to Job": The logical consistency of the papal declaration cannot be surpassed and it leaves Protestantism with the odium of being nothing but a _man's religion_ which allows no metaphysical representation of woman. ...Protestantism has obviously not given sufficient attention to the signs of the times which point to the equality of women. But this equality requires to be metaphysically anchored in the figure of a "divine" woman, the bride of Christ. Just as the person of Christ cannot be replaced by an organization, so the bride cannot be re- placed by the Church. The feminine, like the masculine, demands an equally personal representation. The dogmatizing of the Assumption does not, however, according to the dogmatic view, mean that Mary has attained the status of a goddess, although, as mistress of heaven...and mediatrix, she is functionally on a par with Christ, the king and mediator. At any rate, her position satisfies the need of the archetype. [par. 753-4] : Jung should stick to Psychology rather than getting into Theology. Jung made it clear that he was talking about psychology, not theology. His comments had to do with the psychological _image_ of God and its function in the human psyche, not about the actual existence or nature of God.
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In the New York Times on Sunday May 9th in the week in review section there was a report of a group called "Space Marketing" in Atlanta, Georgia who is planning to put up a one mile wide reflective Earth orbiting satelite which will appear as large and as bright as the Moon and carry some sort of advertising. There was an editorial about this in the Times the following Tuesday. Are others as upset about this as I am? I feel that a global boycott of anyone involved with such a project would be a good idea. Perhaps it could be made illegal in various countries around the world? Do others agree? -david [Relevant messages found on the net:] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: webb@tsavo.hks.com (Peter Webb) Newsgroups: sci.space Subject: Stopping the sky-vandals Date: 13 May 1993 21:17:22 GMT Organization: HKS, Inc. Distribution: world If you don't want to see Space Marketing put up orbiting billboards, write them, or call them, and tell them so. You might also write your congresspeople. Space Marketing can be reached at: Attn: Mike Lawson Public Relations Dept. Space Marketing 1495 Atmbree Rd., Suite 600 Rosewell, GA 30076 (404)-442-9682 -- Peter Webb webb@hks.com Hibbitt, Karlsson & Sorensen, Inc. Voice: 401-727-4200 1080 Main St, Pawtucket RI 02860 FAX: 401-727-4208 [Alternatively, you could try to find out who their clients will be and tell *them* how you feel.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Newsgroups: sci.astro,sci.space,sci.misc,sci.environment,talk.environment From: klaes@verga.enet.dec.com (Larry Klaes) Subject: Light Pollution (Space Ads) Information Keywords: light pollution, advertisements Organization: Digital Equipment Corporation Date: Thu, 13 May 1993 20:45:36 GMT Dave Crawford (crawford@noao.edu), Executive Director of the International Dark-Sky Association (IDA), sent me information on where you can write in regards to the proposed "Billboards in the Sky" and asked me to post it: Karen Brown Center for the Study of Commercialism 1875 Connecticut Avenue, Suite 300 Washington, D.C. 20009-5728 U.S.A. Telephone: 202-797-7080 Fax: 202-265-4954 Please note that I have no involvement whatsoever with the CSC. Larry Klaes klaes@verga.enet.dec.com or - ...!decwrl!verga.enet.dec.com!klaes or - klaes%verga.dec@decwrl.enet.dec.com or - klaes%verga.enet.dec.com@uunet.uu.net "All the Universe, or nothing!" - H. G. Wells EJASA Editor, Astronomical Society of the Atlantic ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: kjenks@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov Newsgroups: sci.space Subject: Re: Vandalizing the Sky Date: 10 May 93 21:51:11 GMT Distribution: sci Organization: NASA/JSC/GM2, Space Shuttle Program Office X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1 PL8] X-Posted-From: algol.jsc.nasa.gov [...] : That's roughly akin to saying let's let Anaconda strip-mine : the Grand Canyon so that strip-mining can boldly go where no : strip mining technology has gone before .. because after all, : mining means profits, and profits mean technological advance- : ment, and technogical advancement means prosperity, and pros- : perity means happiness, and so to hell with the Grand Canyon .. Space advertisement in LOW Earth Orbit is very short term -- on the order of a few years before the orbit decays. (Higher orbits last longer.) Advertisers will certainly be aware of the environmental aspects of their advertising. Fred's argument is roughly akin to saying that it's bad to cut down trees, so we shouldn't advertise in newspapers. Think that through, Fred. Picture this: Our space billboard is a LARGE inflatable structure, filled with "bio-degradable" foam instead of gas. It scoops up space debris as it orbits, thus CLEANING the space environment and bringing you The Pause That Refreshes at the same time. Because of the large drag coefficient, it will de-orbit -- safely burning up -- within a year. Embedded in the foam structure is a small re-entry vehicle, which does not burn up during entry. It contains the electronics and propulsion system (which may be refurbished and re-used) as well as space science experiments proposed and built by high school students in advertiser-sponsored science fairs. Advertisers buy time on the billboard, whose surface is made up of tiny mirrors controlled by the avionics package. The avionics can reconfigure the mirrors to reflect different messages at different parts of the globe. Clever programming allows different languages to every country. During orbital night, the mirrors turn perpendicular to the surface, and small lights are revealed. The lights spell out messages for all to see. -- Ken Jenks, NASA/JSC/GM2, Space Shuttle Program Office kjenks@gothamcity.jsc.nasa.gov (713) 483-4368
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Also known as, "leaning." [severely confused rambling about the ground pushing...] Contersteering refers to pushing the inside handlebar to effect a lean. No-hands countersteering is an oxymoron.
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This is a very good point. I have already made the clear claim that Khomeini advocates views which are in contradition with the Qur'an and have given my arguments for this. This is something that can be checked by anyone sufficiently interested. Khomeini, being dead, really can't respond, but another poster who supports Khomeini has responded with what is clearly obfuscationist sophistry. This should be quite clear to atheists as they are less susceptible to religionist modes of obfuscationism. So, to answer your question, the only way you can judge is by learning more about Islam, that is by reading the Qur'an and understanding it's basic principles. Once one has done this it is relatively easy to see who is following the principles of Islam and who is acting in a way at odds with Islam. Khomeini by attributing a superhuman status to twelve muslim historical leaders is at variance with one of basic principles of Islam, which is that no human being is metaphysically different than any other human being and in no sense any closer to God in metaphysical nature.
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Dear Friends, Hi! I need some information about the Organization ofISlamic Conference (OIC). Does anyone know if there are books, articles, or journals that contains information regarding this organization? If you know would you please send me an E.MAil at my address! I thank you in advance and hope to hear soon since I need thisat present. Regards!!
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the prophets who were there when the foundation was laid for the house of the LORD Almighty, let your hands be strong so that the temple may be built.
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Uh, why do they have to ask a state commision? Unless the state's buying... Such a process will only increace the overhead to the power company of selling different types of light, and will decreace the likleihood that they will do so. And any efficient lights they might have been planning in the future, go down the drain..... You could order it special. If enough people did so, it would be low cost. Last I checked, you could use UPS to buy stuff in Arizona before going there. Finally, I'm sure your state has things like small factories and machine shops. You could go into business making lights that are cheaper to use (thanks to their higher efficiency and the fact that they aren't wasting energy on broadcasting to space) and therefore _better_ than the old style... Five year plans have to be enacted or the planning for the economy will fall apart. As if the clean air act really cleaned up the air... _MY_ *experience* seems to suggest that you're trying too hard to *educate* them (with the same methods used in American schools to make any subject whatsoever as relevant and boring as Proto-Ugric) instead of *selling* them on the idea. ... Well, wake up. Space is becoming a field of human endeavor instead of just something we can look at from a long long way away. There are practical space projects that could conceivably (although probably not) cause lots of light pollution, and have been argued against on those grounds, even though they might open up such possibilities, that people could vacation on Mars if they wanted really dark skies...
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May 13, 1993 _Five Russian soldiers sentenced to death in Azerbaijan_ MOSCOW (UPI) -- Five soldiers who served in Russia's 7th army stationed in Armenia were sentenced to death in the Azerbaijani capital Baku Thursday for allegedly "carrying out diversions and killing 30 Azeri soldiers." A statement released by the news service of Azeri President Abulfaz Elchibey said "the sentence was final and was not subject to protest or appeal," the Russian state news agency Itar-tass reported. But the Russian Foreign Ministry issued an appeal for the men to be handed over to the authorities in Moscow for punishment. "This would accord with modern standards of humanity towards those who have committed crimes," the statement reads. The five men, together with another soldier who received a 15-year prison sentence, were captured in September 1992 by Azeri police in the Kelbadzhar district of Azerbaijan, between Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia. The Supreme Court in Baku said the men had gone through special training in a company of the Russian 7th army in the Armenian capital Yerevan, after which they were sent across the Armenian-Azeri border into Nagorno-Karabakh to carry out diversions against Azeri troops. However, the Russian Foreign Ministry statement claimed they had deserted the Russian army and were fighting as mercenaries with Armenian armed forces in the battle zone round Karabakh. Nagorno-Karabakh is an Armenian-populated enclave within Azerbaijan which for five years has been fighting for independence from Baku in a war that has left many thousands dead and uprooted hundreds of thousands from their homes. Both Yerevan and Baku have always claimed that Russian servicemen stationed in these Caucasian republics, who were left behind after the break-up of the Soviet Union, are fighting as mercenaries in the Karabakh war. The statement from Moscow said the Russian side repeatedly appealed to the Azerbaijani government to show humanity and leniency in their treatment of the six men, and to hand them over to the Russian authorities. It said that President Boris Yeltsin himself sent a letter with this request to his Azeri counterpart Elchibey. Itar-tass said that the soldiers' defense attorneys had lodged an appeal for clemency.
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Hello Ceci: My name is Tony and I have a few comments on your "rosicrucian" adventure. I hereby state that I am not claiming or denying membership in any Order, fraternity etc. with or without the word "Rosicrucian" in the name of the organization. I only claim having done some "homework" :-) This is intended as a friendly article and if at times it seems different, it's my lack of writing skills showing, nothing else. Heck, English may be my second language! (And then again maybe not by now :-) I proceed: Let's start with the name "Rosicrucian". I took me a long time to come to the conclusion that there is a difference between a *member* of a "rosicrucian" body and BEING *a* ROSICRUCIAN. So when you say that you met some 'rosicrucians' you mean "members of a group that calls themselves rosicrucian". At least that is what your observation suggests :-) I'd prefer if you would have stated up front that it was the Lectorium Rosicrucianum, only because they may be confused, by some readers of this newsgroup, with the Rosicrucian Order AMORC based (the USA Jurisdiction) in San Jose, CA; this being the RC org with the most members (last time I looked). Of course, "most members" does not *necessarily* mean "best". Anyway, the Lectorium Rosicrucianum claims they descend (at least in part) from what was the "Gold-und-Rosenkreuz" (Golden and Rosy Cross), from the 18th century. There were two "Golden and Rosy Cross", the first (chronologically) more alchemical, the second with Masonic tinges, but their history is the subject of a complete chapter :-). "You'll have to trust me" when I tell you that if that lecture/class/whatever had been presented by AMORC, it is unlikely that you would have had the same impression, i.e., you'd probably have had a positive impression more likely than a negative one, IMHO. Again, instead of R:s, it should be "Lectorium Rosicrucianum" :-). It is curious to know that 3 other RC 'orders' (in the USA) claim to be *non- sectarian*. The Cathars were a 'heretic' christian sect that directly challenged the 'authority' of the medieval catholic church. They flourished during the 12th century, century which saw the religious zeal expressed in the crusades and also the growing disillusion with the catholic church and the worldly ways of its clerics. It was largely in response to the church's unseemly pomp and splendor that Catharism took root, first in northern Italy, then throughout the south of France. I don't see nothing *fundamentally* wrong with "us containing something divine"... And yes I don't like phrases like "eternal bliss" either! :-) For a moment I thought you were referring to Madison Ave :-) (Madison avenue in New York City is where the most influential (read $$$) *commercial* advertising is produced here in the USA :-) Peace, Tony
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Mainly carbon dust with iron in a plastic binder that is melted on to the paper. Same stuff as dry paper photocopiers. Allergies? Haven't heard of any, but anything's possible with allergies ;-)
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With your level of understanding, my dear friend Mutlu probably thought that he'd be nice and help you genocide apologist to get the point. Besides, all your article reflects is your abundant ignorance. Ignorance is probably the main reason why you historical revisionist are in such a mess. You even make Nazi/criminal Armenians laugh. "In Soviet Armenia today there no longer exists a single Turkish soul. It is in our power to tear away the veil of illusion that some of us create for ourselves. It certainly is possible to severe the artificial life-support system of an imagined 'ethnic purity' that some of us falsely trust as the only structure that can support their heart beats in this alien land." (Sahak Melkonian - 1920 - "Preserving the Armenian purity") "An appropriate analogy with the Jewish Holocaust might be the systematic extermination of the entire Muslim population of the independent republic of Armenia which consisted of at least 30-40 percent of the population of that republic. The memoirs of an Armenian army officer who participated in and eye-witnessed these atrocities was published in the U.S. in 1926 with the title 'Men Are Like That.' Other references abound." (Rachel A. Bortnick - The Jewish Times - June 21, 1990) 1."Men Are Like That" by Leonard A. Hartill, Bobbs Co., Indianapolis, 1926 Memoirs of an Armenian Army Officer translated to English and published by a member of American "Near East Relief Organization." Gives the whole account of the genocide of all Turkish and Moslem people in Armenia organized and executed by Armenian Government and Army. Also gives account of countless other massacres and atrocities against the Turkish people in Armenia. 2."Adventures in the Near East" by A. Rawlinson, Dodd, Meade & Co., 1925 Eyewitness account of the same genocide by a British Army Officer. 3."World Alive, A Personal Story" by Robert Dunn, Crown Publishers, Inc., New York, 1952 Another eyewitness account of the same genocide by an American Officer. 4."From Sardarapat to Serves and Lousanne" by Avetis Aharonian, The Armenian Review Magazine, Volume 15 (Fall 1962) through 17 (Spring 1964) Memoirs of the chief Armenian delegate to the Paris Peace Conference were published in the Armenian Review Magazine in 13 articles from Volume 15 (Fall 1962) to Volume 17 (Spring 1964). These memoirs include an interview between Aharonian and British Foreign Minister Lord Curzon in which above-mentioned genocide was discussed. The official report mentioned by Lord Curzon is the report of British High Commissioner to Caucasia, Sir Oliver Wardrop. 'Kill Turks and Kurds wherever you find them and in whatever circumstances you find them. Turkish children also should be killed as they form a danger to the Armenian nation.' (Hamparsum Boyadjian - 1914)[1] [1] M. Varandian, "History of the Dashnaktsutiun," p. 85. Source: Hovannisian, Richard G.: Armenia on the Road to Independence, 1918. University of California Press (Berkeley and Los Angeles), 1967, p. 13. "The addition of the Kars and Batum oblasts to the Empire increased the area of Transcaucasia to over 130,000 square miles. The estimated population of the entire region in 1886 was 4,700,000, of whom 940,000 (20 percent) were Armenian, 1,200,000 (25 percent) Georgian, and 2,220,000 (45 percent) Moslem. Of the latter group, 1,140,000 were Tatars. Paradoxically, barely one-third of Transcaucasia's Armenians lived in the Erevan guberniia, where the Christians constituted a majority in only three of the seven uezds. Erevan uezd, the administrative center of the province, had only 44,000 Armenians as compared to 68,000 Moslems. By the time of the Russian Census of 1897, however, the Armenians had established a scant majority, 53 percent, in the guberniia; it had risen by 1916 to 60 percent, or 670,000 of the 1,120,000 inhabitants. This impressive change in the province's ethnic character notwithstanding, there was, on the eve of the creation of the Armenian Republic, a solid block of 370,000 Tartars who continued to dominate the southern districts, from the outskirts of Ereven to the border of Persia." (See also Map 1. Historic Armenia and Map 4. Administrative subdivisions of Transcaucasia). In 1920, '0' percent Turk. "We closed the roads and mountain passes that might serve as ways of escape for the Tartars and then proceeded in the work of extermination. Our troops surrounded village after village. Little resistance was offered. Our artillery knocked the huts into heaps of stone and dust and when the villages became untenable and inhabitants fled from them into fields, bullets and bayonets completed the work. Some of the Tartars escaped of course. They found refuge in the mountains or succeeded in crossing the border into Turkey. The rest were killed. And so it is that the whole length of the borderland of Russian Armenia from Nakhitchevan to Akhalkalaki from the hot plains of Ararat to the cold mountain plateau of the North were dotted with mute mournful ruins of Tartar villages. They are quiet now, those villages, except for howling of wolves and jackals that visit them to paw over the scattered bones of the dead." Ohanus Appressian "Men Are Like That" p. 202. Serdar Argic
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I've been following this train of talk, and the question of dismissing atoms as being in some sense "not real" leaves me uneasy. It seems to be implied that we obseve only the effects, and therefore the underlying thing is not necessarily real. The tree outside my window is in this category... is observe the light which bounces off of it, not the tree itself. The observation is indirect, but no more so than observations I have made of atoms. Also, what about observations and experiments that have been routinely done with individual atoms. I am thinking in particular of atom trapping experiments and tests of fundamental quantum mechanics such as the quantum Zeno effect, where an individual atom is studied for a long period of time. Some of the attempts at quantum mechanical arguments were not very satisfying either. One has to be carefull about making such arguments without a solid technical background in the field. What I read seemed a little confused a quite a red herring. Anyway, if the purpose of a public debate is to make the audience think, it worked. After doing so, I'm willing to try to defend the following assertion if anyone cares:
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Obviously not. Count rates are too low and signal rise times too long for this to be possible. The CGRO, is, what, 10 meters long? You'd need to time to an accuracy of nanoseconds to do this. What BATSE actually does is measure the relative strength in each of the detectors (also as a function of photon energy). Each of the detectors does not have isotropic response. To do this right one must model the scattering of photons in the material around each detector, and even scattering of photons off the Earth's atmosphere back onto the spacecraft. I believe they have now reduced the error to about 2 degrees.
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Face it Mr. Beyer, you're just outmatched by us Israeli intellectuals. Any attempts to defend the deceitful, undeserving Palestinians will prove fruitless!
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