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1036 lines
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NUMBER OF LINES: 999
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001=Usr:0 Null User 06/30/87 20:34 Msg:0 Call:0 Lines:19
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1$If you are in need of help, you need but ask...
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2 ************************* INSTALLED: 2 MAY 89 ****************************
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3$Welcome to BWMS II (BackWater Message System II) Mike Day System operator
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4$**************************************************************************
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5$GENERAL DISCLAIMER: BWMS II IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY INFORMATION
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6$ PLACED ON THIS SYSTEM.
|
||
7$BWMS II was created as an electronic bill board. BWMS II is a privately
|
||
8$owned and operated system which is currently open for use by the general
|
||
9$public. No restrictions are placed on the use of the system. As the
|
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10$system is privately owned, I retain the right to remove any and all
|
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11$messages which I may find offensive. Because of the limited size of the
|
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12$system, it will be periodically purged of messages (only 999 lines of data
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13$can be saved). To leave a message, type 'ENTER'. Use ctrl/C to get out
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14$the ENTER mode. The message is automatically stored. If after entering
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||
15$the message you find you made a mistake, use the replace command to
|
||
16$replace the line. To exit from the system, type 'BYE' then hang up.
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17$Type 'HELP' to see other commands that are available on the system.
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18$**************************************************************************
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19$
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002=Usr:1 CISTOP MIKEY 05/02/89 21:26 Msg:3741 Call:20837 Lines:2
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20 Warning: Living can be dangerous to your health.
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21 **********************************************************************
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003=Usr:33 Mike Stanfill 05/02/89 21:47 Msg:3742 Call:20838 Lines:23
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22 /*/*/*/*/*/*/*
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23 First off, a bit of gloating.... "I'm on top! I'm on top! Hahahahahahaaaaa!"
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24 "... and now for something completely different."
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25 /*/*/*/*/*/*/*
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26 "maH poSDaq DIvI'may'Dujmey! So'wI' yIchu'! yIbaH tlhe'chugh!"
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27 "There are Federation Cruisers off our port side! Engage the
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28 cloaking device! If they turn, fire the torpedoes!"
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29 _______ ___ ________ ___
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30 / \ ( X X ) _____________________________
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31 / \ \ / \ / / \
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32 / \ Y (O) (O) Y _| And Remember: |
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33 / \ | ____ | / Only YOU can save the Inn... |
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34 | | | \##/ | /_/| |
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35 | | | ________ | // | *ONLY* *YOU* |
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36 |_______________| ( \______/ ) \_____________________________/
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37 | | \__________/
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38 shovel smokey _
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39 /#)
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40 n n n (#/
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41 "They mean to win Wimbledon!" / ~~~ ~~~ \/
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42 /___/____\__\
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43
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44 */*/*/*/*/*/*/ -swob (a Self-Willed Orange Blancmange)
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004=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 05/02/89 22:15 Msg:3743 Call:20839 Lines:12
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45 &*&*&*&*'s
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46
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47@Rats! one away again. us 293
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48
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49 Rats! beaten to the top. I do believe that the sky is clearer up here, perhaps
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50 with a good hop I could reach out and touch the sky...
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51
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52 No, sometimes it is better to wonder then it is to know.
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53
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54 An Astral Dreamer(I hate 8:30 am meetings! :-) )
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55 &*&*&*&*'s
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56
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005=Usr:4 Milchar 05/02/89 22:58 Msg:3744 Call:20841 Lines:4
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57 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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58 Friar: I frequent (okay, okay, lurk at) the Blue Parrot. There's not
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59 much danger in telling you my persona there... it's Milchar. :-)
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60 ++++++++++++++++++++ Milch +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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006=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 05/03/89 00:42 Msg:3745 Call:20844 Lines:12
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61
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62 &*&*&*&*'s
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63 I've been known to show my face in both places. I also frequent the Overworked
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64 Dragon, one of the best boards in town. I'd say the average age of the users
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65 there is around 28. Nice and interesting.
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66
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67 The Mole is in hibernation, contemplating his current situation. He may return
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68 soon, it depends mostly on wether or not I let him use my terminal. :-)
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69
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70 An Astral Dreamer(Oh I'm 'enry the 8th I am. 'enry the 8th I am, I am.)
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71 &*&*&*&*'s
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72
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007=Usr:11 L'homme sans Par 05/03/89 08:18 Msg:3746 Call:20847 Lines:9
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73 *)(@*%@)%*)*%_)~@#*%)(#*$%)(*%!)_$%)_$%)@_*%_)%*(_#)@~+%(_%*)_%*_)@%*_%*#_)%*_%
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74 Milch: You are Milchar on Blue Parrot? Good heavens! What a revelation! And
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75 all this time *everyone* thought you were someone different.
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76
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77 A.D.: Now you better have respect for those 8:30am meetings. If you worked at
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78 a place, oh, like Intel, they would be 8:00am meetings. You're getting a
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79 small break by having an extra 30 minutes to snooze in the morning.
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80 *%)@*%@#%*@%*)(@*%_)@#%_)@*%_@)*% L'homme sans Parity *@)(#%*)_*!_)$*!)@$*@#_)%
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81
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008=Usr:33 Mike Stanfill 05/03/89 11:46 Msg:3747 Call:20851 Lines:7
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82 /*/*/*/*/*/*/*
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83 Really just lurking, but to help the l:p ratio, I'll post...
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84 Astral: I'm just glad I'm the computer guy at work... some of the traders
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85 get there at 6:00am (cuz that's when trading opens "back east").
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86 Guess I'm just not that much of a "morning person"
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87 Well, back to work! (a parsing we will go, a parsing we will go....)
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88 */*/*/*/*/*/*/ -swob p.s. L'homme: good to see you again. I thot you'd gone
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009=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 05/03/89 15:49 Msg:3748 Call:20854 Lines:16
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89
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90 &*&*&*&*'s
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91
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92 Yea, but if I were working at Intel I'd be making a bit more then I make
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93 here at PPS as a part time grunt. :-)
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94
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95 I've always been an evening person. 3pm to midnight just seems the perfect
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96 time to work. But it seems there are a lot of crazy people out there who
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97 insist on greeting the sun. Alas, they have the temerity to insist the rest
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98 of us do it as well. :-)
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99
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100 Oh well, back to the ever growing Scat program.
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101
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102 An Astral Dreamer
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103 &*&*&*&*'s
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104
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010=Usr:287 Ralph Steadman 05/03/89 16:28 Msg:3749 Call:20855 Lines:100
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105 696969696969
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106
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107 BOYCOTT OF EXXON DEMANDED:-5/3/89
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108 Connecticut state Sen. Mike Meotti and 50 legislators and
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109 environmentalists Tuesday called for a one-day boycott of Exxon, which unloads
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110 oil at the New Haven harbor. Similar protests in other states bashed Exxon for
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111 its handling of the March Valdez oil spill in Alaska.
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112 Mobilization of people, material and equipment in Alaska to meet the
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113 schedule set in Exxon's cleanup plan for 305 miles of shoreline in Prince
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114 William Sound is nearing its peak, W.D. Stevens, president of Exxon Co.,
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115 U.S.A., said. Speaking at the Offshore Technology Conference, Stevens said the
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116 company's "firm intent is to complete the cleanup by the mid-September
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117 deadline."
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118 Protesters and Exxon officials agree it's too early to assess the long-
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119 term impact of boycott of the company. But resentment against Exxon over its
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120 handling of the Valdez oil spill is mounting. Consumers have returned 10,000
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121 credit cards to Exxon in protest, though the company says that's only about 1
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122 percent of 7 million cards it has issued.
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123 Exxon says a boycott of its products won't hurt the company, but
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124 independent dealers will suffer. The boycott is in response to the company's
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125 handling of the Valdez oil spill. "In this instance, a boycott of us in the
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126 marketplace would most affect a very large number of dealers and independent
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||
127 businessmen," Exxon USA President William Stevens said Tuesday in Houston.
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128 Exxon says it's ridiculous to connect higher gas prices with the Alaska
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129 oil spill. Exxon: Number of factors contributed to the high prices, including
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130 higher demand for gasoline during spring and summer when families
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131 traditionally take vacations. But Sens. Jim Exon and Bob Kerrey, both Nebraska
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132 Democrats, asked Attorney General Richard Thornburgh to investigate potential
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133 price gouging.
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134
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135 CRUDE OIL PRICE DROPS:-5/3/89
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136 Crude oil prices fell 86 cents to close below the $20 mark Tuesday on news
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137 that Saudi Arabia pushed up its output last month, taking advantage of a
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138 booming market. West Texas intermediate crude, the U.S benchmark grade, ended
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139 at $19.80 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the lowest closing
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140 price in a month. Crude oil is more than $2 a barrel higher than in January.
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141 OIL PRICES SLIDE IN NEW YORK:-5/3/89
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142 A report that Saudi Arabia is exceeding its OPEC quota for oil production
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143 sent the price of oil sliding 86 cents on the New York Mecantile Exchange.
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144 West Texas intermediate crude, the benchmark grade in the United States,
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145 closed at $19.80 a barrel. The report by Reuters has Saudi Arabia pumping 5.8
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146 million barrels a day. It's quota: 4.5 million barrels. Saudi Arabia denied
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147 the report.
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148
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149 Any bets as to whether gasoline prices will be as quick to fall with falling
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150 crude prices as they were quick to rise??? If so, I have some shoreline in
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151 Alaska you might be interested in purchasing....
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152
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153 696969696969696969
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154
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155 EXXON SHIPPING SAYS THE CAPTAIN OF THE VALDEZ, JOSEPH HAZELWOOD, WAS NOT ON
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156 THE BRIDGE WHERE HE BELONGED, WHEN THE SHIP RAN ONTO A REEF IN ALASKA;
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157 INSTEAD, THIRD MATE GREGORY COUSINS WAS THERE INSTEAD... A DIRECT VIOLATION
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158 OF COMPANY POLICY, WHICH SAYS YOU CAN'T LET JUST ANYBODY AND HIS COUSINS
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159 PILOT THE SHIP...
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160 WHY WASN'T THE CAPTAIN OF THE EXXON VALDEZ ON THE BRIDGE LAST WEEK, WHEN IT
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161 RAN AGROUND AND SPILLED 11 MILLION GALLONS OF OIL INTO THE GULF OF ALASKA?
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162 WELL, THEY SAY HE HAS A HISTORY OF TROUBLE WITH ALCOHOL... THAT WOULD
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163 EXPLAIN WHY HE BECAME A SHIPS CAPTAIN, RATHER THEN, SAY, SECRETARY OF
|
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164 DEFENSE...
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165 THE NERVE OF THAT JUDGE -- TAKING THE AMERICA'S CUP AWAY FROM DENNIS CONNER
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166 AND AWARDING IT TO THE NEW ZEALAND CLUB... AND THE RUNNER UP IS -- THE
|
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167 EXXON VALDEZ...
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168 THE ALASKAN FISHING INDUSTRY WILL SUFFER MILLIONS IN DAMAGE FROM THE BIG
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169 SPILL OFF VALDEZ, ALONG WITH MOST OTHER LOCAL BUSINESSES... HOWEVER, THE
|
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170 SARDINE INDUSTRY WILL MAKE UP FOR A LOT OF THE LOSS, BY NOT HAVING TO
|
||
171 SUPPLY EXTRA OIL TO PACK THEM IN...
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172 A GROUP OF WHITE HOUSE STAFFERS IS SUING THE PRESIDENT IN FEDERAL COURT
|
||
173 OVER MANDATORY RANDOM DRUG TESTING, WHICH THEY SAY VIOLATES THEIR
|
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174 CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS AGAINST UNREASONABLE SEARCH & SEIZURE... LOOK, IF YOU
|
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175 GUYS DON'T LIKE IT, PICK SOME PROFESSION WHERE THEY DON'T DO THAT -- LIKE,
|
||
176 CAPTAIN OF AN OIL TANKER...
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||
177 THE NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION SAFETY BOARD SAYS ABOUT ONE IN FIVE OF THE
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178 NATION'S SCHOOL BUSSES ARE UNSAFE, AND OUGHT TO BE REPLACED... IN THE
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179 MEANTIME, WHAT ARE WE GONNA SEND OUR KIDS TO SCHOOL ON -- OIL TANKERS?
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180
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181 THE NERVE OF THAT JUDGE -- TAKING THE AMERICA'S CUP AWAY FROM DENNIS CONNER
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||
182 AND AWARDING IT TO THE NEW ZEALAND CLUB... AND THE RUNNER UP IS -- THE
|
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183 EXXON VALDEZ...
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184 POINT TO PONDER... IF EXXON IS ACCUSED OF STALLING SO BADLY IN THE GULF OF
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185 ALASKA... WHAT WILL IT DO IN YOUR CAR?
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186 WHAT'S SLOWER THE MOLASSES ROWING UP A HILL IN JANUARY? EXXON, CLEANING UP
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187 A SPILL IN ALASKA...
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188 (Herb Caen says,) INFORMED SOURCES NOW BELIEVE THE EXXON VALDEZ ACCIDENT
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189 WAS CAUSED BY A MISUNDERSTANDING, WHEN THE CAPTAIN ORDERED "TANQUERAY ON
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190 THE ROCKS"...
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191 I STILL CAN'T BELIEVE HOW A MAN CAREFULLY CHOSEN AND SCREENED TO RUN THE
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192 SHOW COULD ABDICATE, SPACE OUT, AND HAND OVER CONTROL TO SOME KID WHO
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193 WASN'T QUALIFIED TO NAVIGATE THROUGH TROUBLED WATERS... NOT THE EXXON
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194 VALDEZ -- OLLIE NORTH!
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195
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196 TODAY'S $1 MILLION QUIZ QUESTION: WHICH IS SLOWER, THE EXXON VALDEZ
|
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197 CLEANUP, OR THE IRS PROCESSING OF REFUND CHECKS?
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198
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199 MORE TROUBLES FOR EXXON: A GROUP OF CALIFORNIANS JUST FILED A CLASS ACTION
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200 SUIT, CHARGING THEM WITH NEGLIGENCE IN CAUSING PRICES AT THE PUMP TO RISE
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201 MORE THAN 20 CENTS A GALLON IN THAT STATE... I FEEL SORRY FOR THEM, BUT I
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202 ALSO FEEL SOME PEOPLE AREN'T GOING TO BE SATISFIED UNTIL THEY SEE EXXON X'D
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203 OUT...
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204 AN OIL TANKER RAN AGROUND IN THE RHINE RIVER IN GERMANY LAST WEEK; A FEW
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011=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 05/03/89 21:22 Msg:3750 Call:20860 Lines:3
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205 &*&*&*&*'s
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206 Just lurking.
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207 &*&*&*&*'a
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012=Usr:465 Gregg Harris 05/03/89 23:14 Msg:3751 Call:20861 Lines:5
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208 )(*&(*&&)(*&(**&(**&((*&*&(*&
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209 ack ack ack.. Lurk
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210
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211 The mole
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212 )(&(**&)(*&&)(*&&)(*&)(*&
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013=Usr:11 L'homme sans Par 05/04/89 01:22 Msg:3752 Call:20863 Lines:15
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213 *)*@$!_)$!@_)$*_)$+!@($_!$*_)!@$*!_)$_!@($_!*$_)!@($_)!@%&_)&^%)_!$!_@)$(!_!_@$
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214 This lurking stuff is becoming an epidemic! The funny thing is that when you
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215 talk about lurking, then you are no longer a lurker. Lurkers are people who
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216 log in to the system, read through all the messages, then log off, with no
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217 evidence of their visit except for miscellaneous log files. These so-called
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218 lurker-posters are contributing to the content of the system, not lurking, so
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219 they should stop calling themselves lurkers. I am sure we can think of other
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220 monikers for them to go by? How about "scribblers" ?
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221
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222 &*&*&*&*&*'s
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223 Just scribbling.
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224 &*&*&*&*&*'a
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225
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226 $*@#)%*@_#)_)@*%~)_#@*)_#*^_)#*^_)(%_)#@(%)_#$*%_)%_)!(%)_@%*)_#%_@)%(_)@^%*#_*
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227
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014=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 05/04/89 08:13 Msg:3753 Call:20866 Lines:6
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228 &*&*&*&*'s
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229 Ok, I'm scribling. BTW you had one to many &*'s above. Was it intentional? :-)
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230
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231 Well, I'm out of here.
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232 &*&*&*&*'s
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233
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015=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 05/04/89 19:10 Msg:3754 Call:20872 Lines:169
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234 &*&*&*&*'s
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235 Well, I'm tired of waiting for people to post. Heres a story I wrote a couple
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236 of years ago.
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237 Faith
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238 By Mike Miller
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239 Father Garlin and Brother Parvis sat in the central most
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240 chamber of the temple of Brian, and starred moodily at the images
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241 that adorned the walls. This room was the private sanctum of the
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242 Piests of Algor, old God of the land of Botonomy.
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243 The Message had only hours before and until now
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244 nobody had spoken of it. But Brother Parvis with the
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245 impulsiveness of youth chose to break the silence.
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246 "I wonder what Brian would have thought of this." he said
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247 with an air of reverence.
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248 "Brian lived in the time of the true Kings, he would be
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249 disappointed by their passing if for nothing else." Father Garlin
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250 replied.
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251 "Yes Father but they passed years ago, three hundred and
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252 sixty two years ago tomorrow, what does this have to do with our
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253 problems now?"
|
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254 "Parvis, sometimes I wonder how you made it past the most
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255 basic levels of the faith. Since the coming of the Governor
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256 Generals the power of our Church has been failing, They
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257 have always seen us as a threat.." Father Garlin sighed deeply.
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258 "I have lived many years, but I never thought I'd live to see
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259 this day."
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260 "Indeed, they have committed a grave blaspheme at the
|
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261 cpitol." brother Parvis agreed.
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262 Father Garlin nodded "I Should have known when the Governor
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263 General started to push forward the belief in this new god Tor
|
||
264 that we would soon be threatened, But I had hoped that the people
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265 would not be fooled."
|
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266 Brother Parvis nodded "Even as you say it is so, When I left
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267 the City to come here three years ago there was still much faith
|
||
268 in the great Algor, Sacred be his name. But now all I hear of are
|
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269 Evils and depravitys, that Scroll is probably the greatest of
|
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270 them all!"
|
||
271 "No" Father Garlin said gesturing at the land that lay
|
||
272 around them just beyond the walls of the Temple. "The greatest
|
||
273 atrocity they have committed is against the people."
|
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274 "how can you say that when they would shut the church and
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275 send us all back to the Capitol to be the lackey to that atrocity
|
||
276 of nature that sits now in the highest seat of our church!"
|
||
277 Brother Parvis yelled.
|
||
278 "Cool you temper boy, for that is what you show yourself to
|
||
279 be. The fitness of the Arch Decon is not for us to question, And
|
||
280 you miss the point besides, The Church exists not only to serve
|
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281 Algor, but also to serve people. Without our protection and
|
||
282 the protection of others like us throughout the countryside The
|
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283 governor General long ago would have made their lives unbearable.
|
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284 Algor is a God, he needs not our services to survive, these
|
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285 people do!"
|
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286 "Perhaps you are right, but I know that if someone true to
|
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287 Algor were the Arch Decon this closing of all our churches would
|
||
288 not have taken place. That man is possessed by the governor
|
||
289 General I think at times. The people of the citys are lost I
|
||
290 fear, but faith is still strong in the country. do we really have
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||
291 to return to the Capitol?"
|
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292 "If we do not they will send Soldiers out to bring us
|
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293 back. I only wish there was something I could do."
|
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294 "Perhaps there is Father, most say that when Bartholamue died
|
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295 you should have been elevated, instead you were demoted and sent
|
||
296 out here" Brother Parvis said leaning forward expectantly in his
|
||
297 seat.
|
||
298 Father Garlin closed his eyes and grimaced in deep thought.
|
||
299 Finely he looked up and spoke. "I fear there is nothing I can do.
|
||
300 leave me now and go relieve Brother Steal. It is bad enough that
|
||
301 there are only three of us to run this place, We can at least give
|
||
302 him time to rest and contemplate what has happened. wake me an hour
|
||
303 before dawn, tomorrow is an important day."
|
||
304 "Ay father, and it would be great indeed if one of the true
|
||
305 blood were to return."
|
||
306 "I fear that tomorrow will be no different from all the days
|
||
307 that preceded it. Good night brother Parvis"
|
||
308 "Good night Father Garlin."
|
||
309 II
|
||
310 Broderic Garlin (for that is how he thought of himself.)
|
||
311 opened the plain wooden door that lead to his room. It was by no
|
||
312 means the largest in the temple but it was the one he claimed as
|
||
313 his own.
|
||
314 The furnishings were plain and the personal items few. He
|
||
315 had never had a need for anything beyond the most basic
|
||
316 necessities. And so the room reflected the man.
|
||
317 The deep sense of regret he felt was not for himself
|
||
318 bt instead for the people he had tried to serve for so many
|
||
319 years. The Governor General was depraved. Far worse then any of
|
||
320 those who had ruled before him, few of which had been even
|
||
321 tolerable.
|
||
322 As he prayed with half his mind the other half began to
|
||
323 wander. This was nothing new, but the thoughts that began to form
|
||
324 there were. As he continued his nightly absolutions the
|
||
325 beginnings of an idea formed. So disturbing was it that he totally
|
||
326 forgot his place in the litany He had recited every night for the
|
||
327 last 30 years and recoiled in shock.
|
||
328 "no." he thought "I can not do this thing, it would be wrong
|
||
329 to lie to those who have trusted me." and yet the thought would
|
||
330 not go away, it nibbled on the edges of his mind incessantly.
|
||
331 finely he could take it no more and was forced to stand and pace
|
||
332 the room. "Algor forgive me!" he mumbled continually. because It was
|
||
333 in his mind that there was a way in which he could save the
|
||
334 church and all that it stood for. but to do so would be to
|
||
335 violate many of his most basic beliefs.
|
||
336 Again he fell to the ground and prostrated himself praying
|
||
337 that some other method would present itself, or that these
|
||
338 thoughts would disappear from his mind. But none had when at last
|
||
339 he fell asleep there on the hard stone floor.
|
||
340 He awoke to a knock on the door, and to the reality of his
|
||
341 aged flesh. "yes" he managed as he lifted himself slowly and painfully
|
||
342 from the floor.
|
||
343 "Father Garlin it's me, Brother Steal. You asked to be
|
||
344 awoken an hour before dawn, and the time is upon us."
|
||
345 "Thank you, I'll be out in a moment Brother Steal."
|
||
346 "As you say Father."
|
||
347 Changing his robe Father Garlins mind returned to the
|
||
348 termoil that had engulfed it before.
|
||
349 "Are you well Father." Brother Steel asked as Father Garlin
|
||
350 moved from his room.
|
||
351 "Sorry Brother Steel I'm afraid my mind is wandering."
|
||
352 "The crowd is the best I've seen in the years I've been
|
||
353 here, I think perhaps the news has gotten out."
|
||
354 "Ah yes" he mumbled.
|
||
355 Brother steal shrugged and gave up on further conversation.
|
||
356 Standing in the doorway that led out to the alter he would stand
|
||
357 at, Father Garlin saw the first light of dawn break over the mountains.
|
||
358 The wind blew chill as he walked out into the early morning
|
||
359 predawn glow. Steeping up to the alter he looked out upon the many faces
|
||
360 that looked up expectantly at him. they were mostly farmers with
|
||
361 a sparse scattering of the towns small merchant class. for many
|
||
362 it was the biggest day of the year. He had performed this ceremony
|
||
363 more times then he could remember, before he had seen looks of expectation
|
||
364 on the faces of those who had stood before him. Now he could see only
|
||
365 questions.
|
||
366 It was at this point that he made his decision.
|
||
367 "I know that you have come here expecting the ceremony of
|
||
368 the true Kings. It is indeed the day and the time but I have
|
||
369 something else to tell you of."
|
||
370 He stopped and prayed to Algor that what he was about to do
|
||
371 was right.
|
||
372 "I have great news for you this morning. First I must tell
|
||
373 you that this night was perhaps the most difficult of my life. I
|
||
374 hd found out only yesterday afternoon that the Arch Decon would
|
||
375 be recalling those of us in the field So that he can
|
||
376 centralize our operations and serve the people better. Now I Know
|
||
377 in my heart that this is wrong, and I thought long
|
||
378 this problem." Here he took a deep breath. "And in the time of my
|
||
379 deepest despair Saint Brian appeared to me and gave me
|
||
380 this message. He said in a voice that echoed inside my head,
|
||
381 "Know that a great evil has fallen upon the land, Know also
|
||
382 that the time is close when the true King will return. Only because
|
||
383 of the faith of the true believers has this come to pass. The evil
|
||
384 in the Cities cannot be allowed to spread. call on all that you
|
||
385 know and spread this message. My lord Algor has said that his
|
||
386 servants shall stay in the countryside and work with the good
|
||
387 people here. he sends also this message to those who live in the
|
||
388 city and those who rule them. 'Continue not down the path you have
|
||
389 followed these many years or my wrath will be vast.' "
|
||
390 "Then Brian told me to give you this message and tell you
|
||
391 that we will not be leaving. If the Govenor General sends his
|
||
392 soldiers to take myself or anyone else back to the Capitol they
|
||
393 are to be stopped. You are the instruments of Algors wrath."
|
||
394 Having said this he looked over the crowd noticing
|
||
395 their shocked expresions. The sun came up over the mountains to
|
||
396 the east. suddenly the cold wind turned warm.
|
||
397
|
||
398 Just thought I'd fill some lines.
|
||
399
|
||
400 An Astral Dreamer.
|
||
401 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
402
|
||
016=Usr:4 Milchar 05/04/89 20:13 Msg:3755 Call:20873 Lines:11
|
||
403 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
404 Do my eyes deceive me? L'homme, where have you been? Transporting
|
||
405 thy goods to your new abode, no doubt.
|
||
406 As for the brief (very brief (ultra brief (turbo brief))) confusion over
|
||
407 my identity, well, let's just say I like to confuse 'em. :-)
|
||
408 And what is this about 8:00am meetings at Intel? It seems your 8:00am
|
||
409 meetings at Sun would conflict a bit....if you have perfected a method
|
||
410 of appearing in two places at once, I would be glad to pay you... :-)
|
||
411 On to other things. Let the non-lurkers scatter their thoughts upon
|
||
412 the phosphors and see what they have wrought.
|
||
413 +++++++++++++++++++++++ Milch (<- not to be confused with Milch) ++++++
|
||
017=Usr:1 CISTOP MIKEY 05/04/89 20:54 Msg:3756 Call:20875 Lines:3
|
||
414 8:30??? Ack! My eye's aren't even open by then, let alone 8:00am!
|
||
415 I think I'll go back to sleep. 'night. ZZZZzzzzzzzz.........
|
||
416 ***********************************************************************
|
||
018=Usr:1 CISTOP MIKEY 05/04/89 20:58 Msg:3757 Call:20876 Lines:187
|
||
417 Anyway, here is the translation. My own comments are within square
|
||
418 brackets. The article is distributed with permission of the author
|
||
419 and is copyrighted (c) 1989 by Ny Teknik, Bertil Berggren. The
|
||
420 translation is copyrighted (c) 1989 by Lars-Henrik Eriksson [myself].
|
||
421
|
||
422 Lars-Henrik Eriksson nternet: lhe@sics.se
|
||
423 Swedish Institute of Computer Science hone (intn'l): +46 8 752 15 09
|
||
424 Box 1263 Telefon (nat'l): 08 - 752 15 09
|
||
425 S-164 28 KISTA, SWEDEN
|
||
426 ------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
427
|
||
428 HE APPLIED FOR A COLD FUSION PATENT BACK IN 1927
|
||
429
|
||
430 Nothing is new under the sun. The much noticed experiment with cold
|
||
431 fusion at the university of Utah is very similar to experiments done
|
||
432 in Sweden back in 1927 - more than 60 years ago.
|
||
433
|
||
434 [A picture of a stern middle-aged man with small glasses and slightly
|
||
435 unruly hair, wearing a laboratory coat. He holds up a test tube with a
|
||
436 dark liquid in it and looks intently at it. In the background, one can
|
||
437 see shelves with many bottles and part of some experimental apparatus.
|
||
438 The caption reads "JOHN TANDBERG at the Electrolux laboratory 1956".]
|
||
439
|
||
440 By Bertil Berggren
|
||
441 ------------------
|
||
442
|
||
443 He has been called one of the greatest scientists of Swedish industry,
|
||
444 John Tandberg (born in Norway 1896), professor at Lund university,
|
||
445 chemist and physicist. During almost 40 years, 1925 - 1962 he worked
|
||
446 at the Electrolux laboratories in Stockholm, the last years as
|
||
447 scientific director and manager. [Electrolux is a large
|
||
448 electrotechnical Swedish company, these days multinational. It is most
|
||
449 well known (in Sweden at least) as a manufacturer of larger household
|
||
450 appliances such as refrigerators and washing machines.]
|
||
451
|
||
452 Today he is almost forgotten, you have to leaf through modern Swedish
|
||
453 encyclopediae for a long time before finding his name. Still, he was a
|
||
454 pioneer, one of the first in the world to make serious attempts to
|
||
455 solve the riddle of nuclear fusion. Perhaps he succeeded as well,
|
||
456 without himself or the rest of the world quite realising it. These
|
||
457 days he is of more interest than ever.
|
||
458
|
||
459 The experiment in Utah, where the american Stanley Pons and the
|
||
460 englishman Martin Fleishmann claim to have produced nuclear fusion at
|
||
461 room temperature in a test tube [sic!], was done under conditions that
|
||
462 were very similar to certain experiments Tandberg did at the
|
||
463 Electrolux laboratories at Grev [Count] Ture street in central
|
||
464 Stockholm in the late 1920's and early 1930's.
|
||
465
|
||
466 In his laboratory he became the first Swede who tried to find both a
|
||
467 theoretical and practical solution to exploit nuclear energy by
|
||
468 particle fusion, the fusing of atomic nuclei.
|
||
469
|
||
470 In the book "Our alchemist in Tomegraend [Tome alley]", a biography of
|
||
471 John Tandbergs life and work, the early work of Tandberg on fusion
|
||
472 research is portrayed. The narrator is Torsten Wilner, a collaborator
|
||
473 in Tandberg's group for several years.
|
||
474
|
||
475 During the 1920's forceful efforts were made in Germany to produce
|
||
476 large quantities of helium for airships. [After world war I, Germany
|
||
477 was not permitted to build airplanes]. There was unrest in the world
|
||
478 and the only large producer, the U.S., was reluctant to export helium,
|
||
479 made from natural gas, to Germany.
|
||
480
|
||
481 At the university of Berlin, the chemists Fritz Paneth and Kurt Peters
|
||
482 sought other ways to produce helium, among other by catalysis of
|
||
483 hydrogen. The basic thought was to investigate "whether hydrogen
|
||
484 without the supply of energy could be partially transformed to helium
|
||
485 in the presence of a cathalyst, primarily palladium".
|
||
486
|
||
487 The hypothesis of Prout - the old thought that hydrogen could be the
|
||
488 "primordial substance" from which all other elements where constructed
|
||
489 - had been given renewed actuality by the dawning research on
|
||
490 radioactivity.
|
||
491
|
||
492 After their studies of hydrogen absorption the the metal palladium
|
||
493 (one volume of palladium will absorb 850 volumes of hydrogen), Paneth
|
||
494 and Peters were of the opinion that there should be a possibility for
|
||
495 spontaneous reactions between the hydrogen nuclei that were contained,
|
||
496 close to each other, within the palladium atom lattice. They reasoned
|
||
497 that perhaps some kind of "nuclear cathalysis" could be expected with
|
||
498 helium as a result.
|
||
499
|
||
500 By diffusing hydrogen through a red-hot palladium capillary, the two
|
||
501 Berlin chemists claimed to have produced helium. The amount was small
|
||
502 and hardly measurable. It did not suffice to fill airships.
|
||
503
|
||
504 The results of Paneth and Peters soon reached Sweden and John Tandberg,
|
||
505 who was interested in the relation of hydrogen to metals. He promptly
|
||
506 began thinking about how an improved helium yield could be obtained in
|
||
507 the process of Paneth and Peters. Tandberg's idea was to increase the
|
||
508 concentration of hydrogen atoms in the cathalyst using electrolysis.
|
||
509 He expected the hydrogen atom density within the palladium to be
|
||
510 greater than in liquid helium.
|
||
511
|
||
512 By using high pressure, about 1000 atmospheres, and starting the
|
||
513 electolysis process at a low temperature, Tandberg believed that the
|
||
514 process should be even more effective.
|
||
515
|
||
516 The result was an application for a Swedish patent, "A way to produce
|
||
517 helium", that was filed on february 17, 1927. The patent application
|
||
518 also comprised a method "characterized in that the reaction vessel is
|
||
519 put into thermal contact with a device that converts the produced heat
|
||
520 into a technically useful form (mechanical work, electrical energy,
|
||
521 cooling or light)". Recieved but not understood, was the reply from
|
||
522 the patent office.
|
||
523
|
||
524 The application was rejected on november 17 the same year with the
|
||
525 reason that "the description is not complete enough that by its use an
|
||
526 expert is likely to be able to practise the invention" [Isn't this a
|
||
527 great way of putting it...?]. But John Tandberg was not a man who let
|
||
528 himself be put down by an unappreciative surrounding.
|
||
529
|
||
530 With the headline "A nuclear blast in 1932" (20 years before the
|
||
531 detonation of the first american hydrogen bomb in the Pacific Ocean in
|
||
532 1952), Torsten Wilner relates in his book:
|
||
533
|
||
534 "The discovery by Urey in 1932 of heavy hydrogen, deuterium, meant
|
||
535 greater possibilities for research in nuclear physics. Nuclei of heavy
|
||
536 hydrogen, deutrons, have a greater ability to achieve nuclear
|
||
537 reactions than the light nuclei, protons, do.
|
||
538
|
||
539 John was quick to take advantage of this. At a rather early stage, he
|
||
540 managed to obtain heavy water, containing deuterium instead of
|
||
541 ordinary hydrogen.
|
||
542
|
||
543 One day after work, John told me that he intended to do an interesting
|
||
544 experiment in the evening. He showed me a small wire of the metal
|
||
545 palladium. By electrolysis of heavy water, using this wire as
|
||
546 cathode, he had saturated it with deuterium in the same way he had
|
||
547 previously done with ordinary hydrogen (1927). Consequently, it could
|
||
548 be expected to contain very densly packed deuterium nuclei.
|
||
549
|
||
550 He was now going to blast the wire by letting a condensor battery,
|
||
551 charged with a high voltage, discharge through it. This would mean a
|
||
552 sudden vaporization during a violent increase of pressure and
|
||
553 temperature.
|
||
554
|
||
555 The densly packed deutrons should get a high energy and there should
|
||
556 be good conditions for violent collisions with nuclear reaction and
|
||
557 fusion as a result. These reactions involve some loss of mass by the
|
||
558 nuclei, so one could expect energy generation according to Einstein's
|
||
559 theory.
|
||
560
|
||
561 That sounded exciting, so I asked John how large the energy generation
|
||
562 could be if all of the deuterium reacted. He calculated for a while,
|
||
563 and replied:
|
||
564 - About a million kilogramcalories [About 4.2*10^9 Joules].
|
||
565 - But that is equivalent to a thousand kilogrammes of dynamite! I exclaimed.
|
||
566 - You are right about that, John replied, but added:
|
||
567 - I think you should go home now. If anything particular happens you
|
||
568 can tell people afterwards what it was.
|
||
569
|
||
570 I went home, and when I returned the next day, everything was as
|
||
571 before. John performed experiments repeatedly, but no disaster struck.
|
||
572 Later the experiments become routine. I was present myself, together
|
||
573 with John, at several occations, and certainly the experiments caused
|
||
574 deafening bangs.
|
||
575
|
||
576 The electric discharges sounded like powerful shots, but some nuclear
|
||
577 physical effect - hard radiation or radioactive residues - could not
|
||
578 be detected with the equipment John possessed at the time."
|
||
579
|
||
580 Torsten Wilner concludes his impressions of John Tandberg:
|
||
581
|
||
582 "In later years I have tried to reconstruct John's calculations. I
|
||
583 also had opportunity to discuss the matter with the plasma and fusion
|
||
584 researcher, professor Bo Lehnert. He pointed out the similarity
|
||
585 between Johns experiments and later experiments that really led to
|
||
586 fusion reactions. At the same time, he demonstrated the large energy
|
||
587 losses that must be taken into account in experiments of Tandberg's
|
||
588 kind.
|
||
589
|
||
590 If John had succeeded in demonstrating a certain - even if very slight
|
||
591 - effect it would have been an extraordinary remarkable discovery for
|
||
592 its time."
|
||
593
|
||
594 So far Torsten Wilner in the book "Our alchemist in Tomegraend".
|
||
595
|
||
596 John Tandberg died in Lund 1968. The scientific world is now waiting
|
||
597 with excitement for the scientific paper about the Utah fusion
|
||
598 experiment that is said to be due for publication in the magazine
|
||
599 Nature in May.
|
||
600
|
||
601 Perhaps it turns out to be "only" a repetition of John Tandberg's
|
||
602 experiment of more than 60 years ago.
|
||
603 --
|
||
019=Usr:465 Gregg Harris 05/04/89 21:45 Msg:3758 Call:20877 Lines:5
|
||
604 )*&)(*&&)(**&&)((*&)*&)(*&)(*&)(*&)(*&
|
||
605 Try and eat them apples :-)
|
||
606
|
||
607 The Mole.
|
||
608 )(*&)(*&)(*&)(*&)(**&)((*&(*(&)((*&)*(&((&
|
||
020=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 05/05/89 07:02 Msg:3759 Call:20881 Lines:3
|
||
609
|
||
610 Wow, Insto fill.
|
||
611
|
||
021=Usr:507 todd rogers 05/05/89 07:27 Msg:3760 Call:20882 Lines:2
|
||
612 anybody here ever hear of the BBS heartbeats? its a load of fun
|
||
613 get it a call and try it out....283-xxxx
|
||
022=Usr:219 Friar Mossback 05/05/89 08:54 Msg:3761 Call:20883 Lines:6
|
||
614 [][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][]
|
||
615 8:00 meetings are the norm here, and at least twice a week, 7:00 AM
|
||
616 meetings. (Twice in the past 6 months, I have attended a pre 7:00 meeting,
|
||
617 once at 6:00, once at 6:30. At least at those, they provided breakfast.)
|
||
618 What is the current lurk:post ratio ?
|
||
619 [][][][][][][][][][][][][] Friar [][][][][][][]Boycott Exxon !![][][]
|
||
023=Usr:287 Ralph Steadman 05/05/89 10:38 Msg:3762 Call:20885 Lines:61
|
||
620 696969696969
|
||
621
|
||
622 NORTH CONVICTED ON 3 COUNTS:-5/5/89
|
||
623 Oliver North was convicted Thursday on three of 12 charges in the Iran-
|
||
624 Contra trial: obstructing Congress by falsifying a list of events in 1986;
|
||
625 taking National Security Council documents; taking an illegal gift - a $13,800
|
||
626 home security system, purchased with money from funds diverted from arms sales
|
||
627 to Iran. The maximum penalty for all counts is ten years in jail and $750,000
|
||
628 in fines.
|
||
629 POLL - PARDON NORTH:
|
||
630 President Bush should pardon convicted Iran-Contra scandal figure Oliver
|
||
631 North, say a majority polled by USA TODAY Thursday. Findings: 72 percent say
|
||
632 North was a Reagan administration "fall guy"; 33 percent say North is a hero;
|
||
633 54 percent agree North was a "willing participant"; 48 percent say North
|
||
634 should spend no time in prison.
|
||
635 NORTH - I WON'T GIVE UP:
|
||
636 Retired Marine Lt. Col. Oliver North declared Thursday that he hasn't
|
||
637 surrendered after a jury convicted him on three of 12 counts in the Iran-
|
||
638 Contra scandal. "As a Marine I was taught to fight and fight hard for as long
|
||
639 as it takes to prevail," North said at a news conference, his wife Betsy at
|
||
640 his side. "We will be fully vindicated."
|
||
641 IRAN-CONTRA QUESTIONS IRK BUSH:
|
||
642 President Bush hotly rejected questions about his activities in the Iran-
|
||
643 contra scandal as Congress steps up pressure for more answers from the White
|
||
644 House. Bush says he takes it personally when he is pelted with questions about
|
||
645 whether he offered to give Honduras U.S. aid in exchange for helping the
|
||
646 Nicaraguan Contras when Congress banned direct assistance.
|
||
647 TODAY'S DEBATE - OLIVER NORTH AND IRAN-CONTRA
|
||
648 USA TODAY'S OPINION:
|
||
649 To prosecutor John Keker, Oliver North was a cross between Adolf Hitler
|
||
650 and Joe Isuzu. To defense attorney Brendan Sullivan, he was a loyal and
|
||
651 dedicated Marine. A jury decided Thursday that he was a bit of each. That's
|
||
652 justice.
|
||
653 OTHER VIEWS:
|
||
654 JESSE HILL FORD, novelist and screen writer: The man who would have freed
|
||
655 the hostages has been taken hostage, pilloried by the country he served so
|
||
656 steadfastly. And in this foul process our jury system has been prostituted,
|
||
657 judicial honor defiled, and the will of the people denied. But Oliver North's
|
||
658 leadership qualities ensure he will rise above this mess and serve his country
|
||
659 again.
|
||
660 GEORGE THOMPSON, a former U.S. foreign service officer: The jurors had a
|
||
661 terrible, thankless task. They undoubtedly knew they had been asked to convict
|
||
662 Ollie as nothing more than a self-styled pawn in a game of chess. Exit the
|
||
663 jurors, knowing the real criminals are still out there. If only we could try
|
||
664 them all.
|
||
665 BRENDAN SULLIVAN, North's attorney, to jury: "What's the difference
|
||
666 between what Ollie North did and the president did? The president is happily
|
||
667 retired in California. Oliver North has spent 2 1/2 years in a Washington
|
||
668 courtroom fighting for his reputation."
|
||
669 JOHN KEKER, North's prosecutor, to jury: "Don't be misled by the emotional
|
||
670 content of this `fall guy' term...The fall guy is guilty. The winner is
|
||
671 guilty. The people who pay him are guilty. They are all guilty."
|
||
672 WALNUT CREEK, CALIF., John Claibourne, 44, television engineer: I'm not so
|
||
673 sure that Oliver North should have gone to trial because I think they tried
|
||
674 the wrong guy. He was the fall guy. Others are guilty, but we'll never be able
|
||
675 to touch them.
|
||
676 MIDDLETOWN, N.Y., Barbara Kline, 54, homemaker: Oliver North should have
|
||
677 been punished. It's one thing to be a military man and another to be a
|
||
678 demagogue.
|
||
679
|
||
680 696969696969696969
|
||
024=Usr:287 Ralph Steadman 05/05/89 12:25 Msg:3763 Call:20886 Lines:85
|
||
681 696969696969
|
||
682 APn 05/03 1989 By PAUL JENKINS Associated Press Writer
|
||
683 VALDEZ, Alaska (AP) -- Thousands of dead birds, snared in a giant glob of
|
||
684 sticky oil, line a beach 300 miles southwest of Valdez, victims of the spreadin
|
||
685 crude that has devastated Alaska's coast for weeks.
|
||
686 While enviromentalists, government and Exxon officials trade barbs over
|
||
687 blame, the oil drifts inexorably, fouling the shoreline and leaving dead, dying
|
||
688 or dirtied birds, fish, otters, seals and sea lions. Even Alaska's lumbering,
|
||
689 powerful brown bears have been seen prowling on oil-caked beaches.
|
||
690 The oil is selective: It leap-frogs large stretches of coast, then hits
|
||
691 others with contamination ranging from a light film to ankle-deep goo.
|
||
692 "We landed along a wide tidal basin, about six miles of beach," said Ray
|
||
693 Bane, superintendent of Katmai National Park. "We found oil debris in large
|
||
694 quantities throughout the tidal zone. We saw 2,000 to 3,000 dead birds. ... You
|
||
695 can't really tell what they are. They're one big blob of oil."
|
||
696 Since March 24, when the tanker Exxon Valdez smashed into Bligh Reef in
|
||
697 Prince William Sound and leaked 10.1 million gallons of crude through its
|
||
698 shattered hull, the reports of destroyed wildlife have multiplied steadily.
|
||
699 The spyll has reached Chignik, 525 miles southwest of Valdez, and residents
|
||
700 there are fearful the oil may interfere with their salmon season, which begins
|
||
701 next week.
|
||
702 "What we found, say in every 100-foot distance, was four to eight dead murre
|
||
7 3 on the average," Bane said of the sea birds. "We also saw fresh bear tracks
|
||
704 going back into the impacted areas. There was evidence of foxes and other
|
||
705 scavengers. We observed one bear -- a sow and three yearlings -- that was in th
|
||
706 contaminqted0area, feeding on dead birds. ... We saw eagles carrying oil-covere
|
||
707 birds. We saw one eagle so coated in oil that it couldn't fly."
|
||
708 One state scientist said wind-whipped oil "mousse" was pounded into a beach
|
||
709 by wave action and buried q yard below the surface. Another reported seeing
|
||
710 otters surrounded by floating oil.
|
||
711 Late Monday, Exxon offered a revised plan to clean up 364 miles of tainted
|
||
712 coastline by September, but environmentalists and Coast Guard Adm. Paul Yost,
|
||
713 the federal government's top official monitoring the spill, immediately
|
||
714 criticized it as inadequate.
|
||
715 Dennis Kelso, Alaska's commissioner of environmental conservation, said the
|
||
716 proposal was "a few pages of wishful thinking ... (that) makes it appear as
|
||
717 though cleaning those areas is little more than a Sunday stroll on the beach."
|
||
718 Yost, who must approve the plan before it can go into effect, called Exxon's
|
||
719 strategy "very thin." Yost briefly toured part of the spill abua Tuesday,
|
||
720 visiting the USS Juneau, the Coast Gaurd's command ship for the cleanup.
|
||
721 Today, Yost was scheduled to take U.S. Transportation Secretary Samuel
|
||
722 Skinner on an inspection of the spill zone. At a speech Tuesday in Washington,
|
||
723 D.S., Skinner called the spill "the most significant environmental disaster thi
|
||
724 nation has ever faced."
|
||
725 On Thursday, he meets with Vice President Dan Quayle, who is expected in
|
||
726 Alaska after a 12-day tour of the Pacific.
|
||
727 Exxon a|co faced a day of boycott Tuesday, as groups around the country urge
|
||
728 consumers to stop buying Exxon products. Consumer activist Ralph Nader said in
|
||
729 Washington that Exxon "should not be allowed to forget" the spill and that a
|
||
730 boycott would send the oil giant a message.
|
||
731 J. Edward Surette Jr., executive director of the Bay State Gasoline Retailer
|
||
732 Association in Billerica, Mass., said it was too early to assess the boycott's
|
||
733 impact.
|
||
734 Exxon spokeswoman Sarah Johnson said !0,000 of its 7 million credit cards
|
||
735 have been cut up and returned since the spill.
|
||
736 In Anchorage, 400 chanting and sign-waving protesters rallied in front of
|
||
737 Exxon's Alaska headquarters, calling for a boycott.
|
||
738 The Exxon Valdez is undergoing preliminary repairs in Prince William Sound
|
||
739 and is to be towed next month to Portland, Ore., home of the only drydock on th
|
||
740 West Coast capable of handling the 987-foot ship.
|
||
741 0
|
||
742 APn 05/05 1989.By SUSAN GALLAGHER Associated Press Writer
|
||
743 ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -- Vice President Dan Quayle toured sludge-fouled
|
||
744 beaches on his return from a 12-day Pacific tour, and said today Exxon must do
|
||
745 more to clean up the devastation wrought by the nation's largest oil spill.
|
||
746 "It's going to be an enormous effort," Quayle said Thursday as he looked at
|
||
747 beach on hard-hit Smith Island, an important haulout area for seals. Workers
|
||
748 have been |aboring for days to wash the beach clean.
|
||
749 Then at a news conference early today, Quayle said it appears Exxon believes
|
||
750 its cleanup plan is adequate, "But I believe Exxon's going to have to do more
|
||
751 than they think they're going to have to do," he said.
|
||
752 Quayle, accompanied by his wife, Marilyn, and joined by Coast Guard
|
||
753 Commandant Paul A. Yost Jr. and federal Transportation Secretary Samuel Skinner
|
||
754 ended his Pacific trip Thursday with a six-hour, wind- and rain-swept tour0of
|
||
'55 the spill zone.
|
||
756 The vice president's jet arrived from Japan at the fishing town of Cordova,
|
||
757 about 50 miles from the site of the March 24 spill, which was caused when the
|
||
758 tanker Exxon Valdez slammed into a charted reef outside ship`ing lanes and
|
||
759 ripped open spilling 11.2 million gallons of oil.
|
||
760
|
||
761 Even J. Danforth Quayle has a better grasp of the situation than Exxon or Georg
|
||
762 Bucx dous.....______--------->>BOYCOTT EXXON<<------------________
|
||
763
|
||
764 696969696969696969
|
||
765
|
||
025=Usr:465 Gregg Harris 05/05/89 14:05 Msg:3764 Call:20887 Lines:9
|
||
766 9(&)&*)(&)(&)(&)(&()&*&)(&*
|
||
767
|
||
768 Tip mode :-)
|
||
769
|
||
770 Oh, a Lurking (scrribling) I will go, a scribbling I will go,
|
||
771 High ho a dairy ho, a scribbling I will go.
|
||
772
|
||
773 The Mole modus tipus
|
||
774 )(*&)(*&)(*&)(&*)(&*)(&*)(&*)(&*)(&
|
||
026=Ucr:8$ Michael Miller j 05/05/89 14:34 Msg:3765 Call:20888 Lines:7
|
||
775 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
776 Tiping? Hmm, So am I. Its a small world! :-)
|
||
777
|
||
778 An Astral Dreamer
|
||
779 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
780
|
||
781 5.55 to one and dropping.
|
||
027=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 05/05/8) 19:36 Msg:3766 Call:20893 Lines:3
|
||
782
|
||
783 Currently on the rise. Warm weather means less serious bbs'ing.
|
||
784
|
||
028=Usr:4 Milchar 05/05/89 19:52 Msg:3767 Call:20894 Lines:7
|
||
785 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++;+++;++++++++
|
||
786 SERIOUS bbsing? Come now, when is it *EVER* serious? Especially during
|
||
787 gatherings such as CBBS/NW's 10th Birthday party, being held tomorrow
|
||
788 at Stark Street Pizza (92nd and Stark) at 2:00pm. (Please ignore blatant
|
||
789 plug, but I expect this to be the largest BBS gathering since BW I's
|
||
790 wake!)
|
||
791 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Milch ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
029=Usr:4 Milchar 05/05/89 22:08 Msg:3768 Call:20896 Lines:56
|
||
792 ::: BGN CYBER-LINK: ID F7(B:9EA1:C88D CODED: SEMAPHORE :::
|
||
793
|
||
794 Newspapermen called it "the Grid." Nodes of data strung out
|
||
795 like ornaments on a tree in a data matrix measuring 1000000H cubed.
|
||
796 This was the data that represented humanity, updated every nanosecond
|
||
797 by countless millions of users. For Sem, THIS was reality.
|
||
798 The myriad controls beneath the hands of Sem's matrix-analogue
|
||
799 glittered in the false light of the matrix. He geared himself up for
|
||
800 the run. His drug worked ids mawic on him, and he felt POWER rush
|
||
801 through his body. There would be no finesse to this one- just a
|
||
802 typical snatch-and-run. Only no one had ever tried it on the Turings
|
||
803 before and lived.
|
||
804 <PGM ID: DIAMONDCUTTER REV 7>
|
||
805 <PGM STATUS : THREADS 00-31 TRACKING::00 ACTIVE>
|
||
806 <LOCK ON: 5F7B:A8-93E1:01-D448:BB IDENT AS: TURING N.A.> shone
|
||
807 the pseudo-display. Now or never. Sem hit COMMIT.
|
||
808 DiamondCutter shot forward, closing the distance even0befobe
|
||
809 the ICE systems reacted.
|
||
810 Tendrils of dead black ICE whipped forward instantly, blindly
|
||
811 seeking the intruder. Their lightest touch would invoke lethal
|
||
812 biofeedback programs, designed to snuff out nosy console jockeys.
|
||
813 DiamondCutter moved evasively, firing missle-analogues containing
|
||
814 a particularly effective snafu program. Its aim was deadly. As each
|
||
815 missle-program found its target, more of the Turing defense system
|
||
816 collapsed under massive system failubus. 0In less than an instant,
|
||
817 Sem was through the outer defenses.
|
||
818 <PGM STATUS : THREADS 00-31 TRACKING::07 ACTIVE>
|
||
819 <PGM INFO : REALLOC 07-31 DONE>
|
||
820 <PGM STATUS : THREADS 00-06 TRACKING::16-31 SEARCHING::32 ACTIVE>
|
||
821 Now Sem switched to the offensive, directing DiamondCutter to devote
|
||
822 more attention to finding the ANN database. It wasn't something that was
|
||
823 likely to be just lying around.
|
||
824 <PGM WARNING: ICE SOURCE PRESENT, THREAD 0% ASCIGNED>
|
||
825 <PGM WARNING: ICE SYSTEMS OUTNUMBER TRACKING THREADS>
|
||
826 Sem brought DiamondCutter to a dead halt. There were very few
|
||
827 sources of ICE in the matrix. Only one type could generate ICE that
|
||
828 rapidly-- an AI. "ID0%" he typed.
|
||
829 <PGM ID: UNKNOWN AI, ESTIMATED CLASS .GT. 5>
|
||
830 "Jesus," Sem said out loud, "they're hunting for bear." Sweat
|
||
831 broke out on his brow. The drug had long worn off. Suddenly this run
|
||
832 looked a lot less appealing.0 He0had not expected the Turings to use
|
||
833 an AI for their ICE.
|
||
834 <PGM WARNING: 13 THREADS DOWN DUE TO ICE, 19 ACTIVE>
|
||
835 Sem was running out of time. Once all the threads were down,
|
||
836 there would be nothing to defend him against the biofeedback
|
||
837 programs. "Find it, damn you, find--"
|
||
838 <PGM INFO : THREAD 03 FOUND TARGET DATA>
|
||
839 His heart raced. "EX03" he managed to pound out on the keyboard.
|
||
840 <PGM WARNING: 25 THREADS DOWN DUE TO ICE, 07 QCTIVE>
|
||
841 The display blinked.
|
||
842 <PGM WARNING: 29 THREADS DOWN DUE TO ICE, 03 ACTIVE>
|
||
843 "Work, dammit! WORK!" Sem screamed.
|
||
844
|
||
845 ::: END CYBER-LINK: RUN TIME 00:23:37 CODED: SEMAPHORE :::
|
||
846
|
||
847
|
||
030=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 05/06/89 10:20 Msg:3769 Call:20902 Lines:14
|
||
848 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
849 I like the story, its very good.
|
||
850
|
||
851 Milch, the modem on the portable does not like ,'s, thats why I couldn't
|
||
852 get it to work the last time I tried. Well I'm ctuck0in The Dalles, and
|
||
853 I'm missing a drivers.tpu file. So Milch, is there any way of me getting
|
||
854 this? I need it to continue work on the Scat program.
|
||
855
|
||
856 Well, I'm out of here. Hope you all enjoy that huge BBS bash. Long
|
||
857 distance is the pits.
|
||
858
|
||
859 An Astral Dreamer
|
||
860 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
861
|
||
031=Usr:4 Milchar 05/06/89 11:25 Msg:3770 Call:20904 Lines:4
|
||
862 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
863 AD: What I'll do is upload it int /usb/transfer. I'll make sure you
|
||
864 have read permission. Will that do?
|
||
865 +++++++++++++++++++++++++ Milch +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
032=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 05/06/89 19:43 Msg:3771 Call:20911 Lines:9
|
||
866 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
867 Wow, cure is silent around here. That will be great, I'll call and get
|
||
868 the file now. I've moved a lot of the routines into a seperate file.
|
||
869 Strangly enough the compiled executable is now SMALLER! and I didn't take
|
||
870 anything out. Is there some magis involved in .TPU files?
|
||
871
|
||
872 An Astral Dreamer
|
||
873 &*&*&*&*'s
|
||
874
|
||
033=Usr:287 Ralph Steadman 05/06/89 20:07 Msg:3772 Call:20912 Lines:100
|
||
875
|
||
876
|
||
877 CompuServe ROK-1448
|
||
878
|
||
879 Rick Nelson, who died in a New Year's Eve plane crash near De Kalb, Texas,
|
||
880 jined a list of musicians including big band leader Glenn Miller, country
|
||
881 singer Patsy Cline, and rock greats Otis Redding and Buddy Holly -- all of whom
|
||
882 met early deaths in air accidents.
|
||
883 ^elson, 45, achieved rock 'n' roll stardom in the late 1950s and early '60s
|
||
884 with hits like "I'm Wakin,"' and "ravelin' Man." He was featured, along with th
|
||
885 rest of his family, on the long-running TV series, "The Adventures of Ozzie and
|
||
886 Hriet." He often sang his hit songs on national TV, which undoubtedly boosted
|
||
887 his rock stardom.
|
||
888 His career after the "Ozzie and Harriet" years never equaled his earlier
|
||
889 fame, but he was in a number of movies and hd several moderately successful0son
|
||
890 hits.
|
||
891 Plane crashes have cut short the lives of at least eight other famous
|
||
892 musicians.
|
||
893 Still shrouded in mystery is the death of big band leader Glenn Miller. On
|
||
894 Dec. 15, 1944, Miller's plane was flying over the English Channel en route from
|
||
895 Bedford, England to Paris where he was to give a show. The plane never arrived.
|
||
896 Two members of the British Royal Air Force now say the musician's plane might
|
||
897 have been hit by bombs jettisoned over the English Channel by RAF bombers.
|
||
898 These other musicians also met air deaths:
|
||
899 Feb. 3, 1959: A plane carrying singers J.P (The Big Bopper) Richardson, Budd
|
||
900 Holly and Richie Valens crashed near Mason City, Iowa en route to a show in
|
||
901 Fargo, N.D. The Big Bopper, whose big hit was "Chantilly Lace" in 1958, was 29.
|
||
902 Holly, whose hits included "Peggy Sue" and "Not Fade Away," was 22. And Richie
|
||
903 Valens, famous for songs like "La Bamba" and "Donna," was only 18.
|
||
904 March 5, 1963: Patsy Cline, whocu country hits included "Crazy" and "She's
|
||
905 Got You," died in a plane crash near Camden, Tenn., at age 31. Killed with her
|
||
906 were Grand Ole Opry stars Cowboy Copas and Hawkshaw Hawkins and pilot Randy
|
||
907 Hughes, Miss Cline's manager. Her life was dramatized in the recent movie,
|
||
908 "Sweet Dreams," starring Jessica Lange as Miss Cline.
|
||
909 July 31, 1964: Country music singer Jim Reeves, known for hits like "Welcome
|
||
910 to My World" and "He'll Have to Go," died at age 39 in a light plane crash0near
|
||
911 Nashville along with his manager, Dean Manuel, 30.
|
||
912 Dec. 10, 1967: Rhythm and blues artist Otis Redding died in a plane crash in
|
||
913 Wisconsin along with members of his band, the Bar-Kays. He was 26. His greatest
|
||
914 hit, "Sittin' on the Dock of The Bay," was released just three days before the
|
||
915 crash.
|
||
916 Sept. 20, 1973: Jim Croce put together a string of rock hits in the 1970s
|
||
917 before he died in an air crash near Natchitoches, La., at age 30.
|
||
918 Oct. 21, 1977: Singer Ron~ie Van Zant and some members of his Lynyrd Skynyrd
|
||
919 band, which carved a niche in the rock world with its image as hard-drinking,
|
||
920 hell-raising Southerners, were killed in a plane crash in McComb, Miss.
|
||
921
|
||
922 =======TIME WARP=========
|
||
923
|
||
924
|
||
925
|
||
926
|
||
927
|
||
928
|
||
929
|
||
930
|
||
931 Can't SCROLL from
|
||
932 that number !4
|
||
933
|
||
934 4 is an invalid choice !
|
||
935
|
||
936 KCS Humor/Satire KCS-1475
|
||
937
|
||
938 = = = = = = = *** = = = = = = =
|
||
939 SCROLL OF THE YEAR
|
||
9400 = = = = = = = *** = = = = = = =
|
||
941 First, you'll want to know what 'Scroll of the Year' is all about. Simple.
|
||
942 It's a list--a short list now, but one to which we'll add items all year long.
|
||
943 This list--beginning shortly--contains the useless, the vapid, personal
|
||
944 affectations, phonies and stocks to avoid, among other things.
|
||
945 Scroll this list every now and then throughout the year. View it as a kind o
|
||
946 pop art, if you will (or if you won't, we don't care). Let its ever-increacyng
|
||
947 length remind you what a parody of life life itself really is.
|
||
948 *Luggage racks are standard equipment on some new station wagons.
|
||
949 *Sober kids find fun pretending to be drunk drivers.
|
||
950 *Someone should invent a self-cleaning desk.
|
||
951 *Super Bowl Sunday is an ideal day to go shopping.
|
||
952 *Boat shows are always held in the winter.
|
||
953 *In the long run, the price of gas will go up.
|
||
954 *Today's temperature is either too hot or too cold.
|
||
955
|
||
956 Last page !
|
||
957
|
||
95( Can't SCROLL from
|
||
959 that number !2
|
||
960
|
||
961 2 is an invalid choice !
|
||
962
|
||
963 KCS Humor/Satire KCS-277
|
||
964
|
||
965 = = = = = = = *** = = = = = = =
|
||
966 THE SOURCE REVEALED
|
||
967 By Billiam Coronel
|
||
968 Of Comedy By Wibe
|
||
969 = = = = = = = *** = = = = = = =
|
||
970 Detectives revealed today that the Source information utility is not really a
|
||
971 group of mainframe computers run by hundreds of employees, as was previously
|
||
972 believed. In fact, the Source is just a Ratio Shack model 4 with a hard disk
|
||
973 controlled by a 16-year-old high schooler in Fort Worth.
|
||
974 "It wasn't really that hard to fool people," claimed Nathan Liblick. "I got
|
||
034=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 05/07/89 08:47 Msg:3773 Call:20925 Lines:3
|
||
975
|
||
976 So How did the bbs bash of the decade go?
|
||
977
|
||
035=Usr:287 Ralph Steadman 05/07/89 14:19 Msg:3774 Call:20929 Lines:22
|
||
978 ====TIME WARP==== from the Deja Vu files:
|
||
979 Executive News Svc.
|
||
980
|
||
981 Awa 01/16 0552 TankerBan
|
||
9820 PORT ANGELES, Wash. (AP) -- Clallam County officials say they are considerin
|
||
983 a ban on tanker traffic in Port Angeles Harbor because of last month's oil spil
|
||
984 that fouled the county's beaches and killed more than 1,000 birds.
|
||
985 Commissioneb Dobothy Duncan said commissioners were weighing the costs and
|
||
986 benefits of allowing oil tankers to berth in Port Angeles on their way to
|
||
987 refineries in Washington's inland waters.
|
||
988 But Atlantic Richfield Co., owner of the tanker ARCO Anchorage0that spilled
|
||
989 the 189,000 gallons of Alaska crude oil in Port Angeles on Dec. 21, said it and
|
||
990 other tanker owners would challenge any move to keep tankers out of the harbor.
|
||
991 And Coast Guard Capt. John De Carteret said that even though the county coul
|
||
992 the ships from the harbor, the law could be challenged in
|
||
993 court and proved in violation of interstate commerce rules.
|
||
994 Cleanup of the spill is nearly complete. Arco is paying the more than $3
|
||
995 million in cleanup costs>
|
||
99& The existing regulation banning tankers of more than 125,000 tons from Puget
|
||
997 Sound was established only because the state asked the Coast Guard to institute
|
||
998 the rule, De Carteret said.
|
||
999 Ms. Duncan was not available Wednesday evening to respond to De Carteret's
|