NUMBER OF LINES: 999 001=Usr:0 Null User 06/30/87 20:34 Msg:0 Call:0 Lines:19 1$If you are in need of help, you need but ask... 2$************************* INSTALLED: 8 SEP 89 **************************** 3$Welcome to BWMS II (BackWater Message System II) Mike Day System operator 4$************************************************************************** 5$GENERAL DISCLAIMER: BWMS II IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY INFORMATION 6$ 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$public. No restrictions are placed on the use of the system. As the 10$system is privately owned, I retain the right to remove any and all 11$messages which I may find offensive. Because of the limited size of the 12$system, it will be periodically purged of messages (only 999 lines of data 13$can be saved). To leave a message, type 'ENTER'. Use ctrl/C to get out 14$the ENTER mode. The message is automatically stored. If after entering 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. 17$Type 'HELP' to see other commands that are available on the system. 18$************************************************************************** 19$ 002=Usr:1 CISTOP MIKEY 09/08/89 18:08 Msg:4324 Call:23820 Lines:5 20 Admitting error clears the score and proves you wiser than before. 21 Arthur Guiterman 22 ********************* Disk #100.5 ************************************* 23 Some say the end is near. I say that it is only the beginning. 24 *********************************************************************** 003=Usr:368 Nemesis Warlock 09/08/89 19:23 Msg:4325 Call:23823 Lines:5 25 :::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::==== 26 After FIVE years of modeming, at last, on the TOP! 27 Friar: WWhat condition is the story in? After a week, no new entries... Have 28 we reached a creative dry spell? An update would be MOST helpful right now! 29 :::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::==Zephyr::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::==== 004=Usr:11 L'homme sans Par 09/08/89 19:48 Msg:4326 Call:23824 Lines:12 30 ------------------====================--------------------==============------- 31 So in other words, you would like to keep getting one-sided news stories with 32 inane side comments and attaboys for left-wing pantywaists. I see. Hmmm, just 33 a sec while I try to find a bucket of sand to loan you. Aw heck, you can have 34 it! 35 36 As for easily defeated logs, what are you doing defeating logs, anyway? Did 37 the logs ask you to defeat them? Exactly what did they ever do to you to 38 deserve this defeating treatment you are giving them. Geez, what a bully. 39 Next time, pick on someone your own size, like the CIA's new ultra-secret 40 NIFTY computer generated code. Heh heh. 41 ======================---------------============Charitable===========--------- 005=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 09/08/89 22:25 Msg:4327 Call:23830 Lines:11 42 &*&*&*&*'s 43 Sure its lopsided, I don't know of any media that isn't. The media tends to 44 serve itself more then anybody else. Don't think I buy everything I read, 45 and taking an extreme view you could view these news stories as fiction. 46 Albeit not very origional. 47 48 Oh well, time I took these scattered brain cells to bed. 49 50 An Astral Dreamer 51 &*&*&*&*'s 52 006=Usr:379 Phoenix Polymorp 09/08/89 22:38 Msg:4328 Call:23831 Lines:18 53 THIS IS WORLD WATCH THREE>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>08-SEP-89 54 Contrary to popular belief, the Ultimate answer to life, the universe and every 55 thing is NOT 42. It is, infact, maybe. We have no proof of this, however; no 56 one has been able to disputet it. 57 58 Maybe is a more logical answer than 42. For instance- Does it matter, cosmicly 59 speaking, that I go to work? 42, Does that fit? Does it make sense? No! 60 61 Try this- If everybody ignores the law of gravity, would apples fall up? 42? 62 What? 63 64 In both cases, maybe fits much better than 42. Our apologies to Deep Thought, 65 but; nice try. 66 67 For Thought For The Disk, I'm Phoenix Polymorph. 68 69 WWIII>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>NW0 70 --------------------------- 007=Usr:286 Jeff Marten 09/08/89 23:33 Msg:4329 Call:23834 Lines:36 71 72 73 {+}{+}{+}{+} 74 75 The News Junkie Says: 76 77 One thing you gotta say about George Bush's 78 War On Drugs so far... 79 it sure put a stop to The Iranian Hostage Crisis. 80 81 Tammy Faye had a great quote the other day, in reference to 82 Jim having to "bend over in front of all those men" for his 83 daily strip search : 84 85 "This should not be allowed in the United States of America." 86 Well, shucks. 87 There are a lot of things that shouldn't be allowed, Tammy... 88 THAT'S WHY JIM IS ON TRIAL 89 90 Another fine quote : 91 NBC News Anchorbabe Deborah Norville, talking about one of 92 the teen female heinous crime perpetrators she interviewed 93 for the critically loathed and highly rated NBC News Special 94 { "Bad Girls" : 95 96 "And she was really pretty,too....she could have been a 97 model." 98 OR A NETWORK NEWS ANCHOR 99 100 101 -+|[ ThingFish ]|+- 102 That's The News And I Am Outta Here 103 104 105 {+}{+}{+}{+} 106 008=Usr:33 Mike Stanfill 09/09/89 12:51 Msg:4330 Call:23844 Lines:64 107 /*/*/*/*/*/*/* 108 >But what both Friar and I have been saying is that *statements* may be true, 109 > false, or anything inbetween. Your example above will do quite well: 110 > "water boils". The statement may be true or it may be false. But it requires 111 > information not present in the statement OR IN THE RULES OF DISCOURSE to 112 > determine which. 113 114 Of course. A collection of glyphs can have no logical value unless 115 they are assigned a meaning, but that meaning is (in my view) within 116 the realm of fact and therefore subject to strict truth or falsehood. 117 Sure I have to know what "water" is and what "boil" means before I can 118 logically evaluate the sentence, and I'll have to have some sort of 119 evidence in order to come to a conclusion, but in the end water either 120 boils (under *some* set of conditions) or it does not. All I'm saying 121 is that the *meaning* of a statement must be true or false. I hope 122 you didn't think me so foolish as to think that English statements 123 somehow had value separate from their meanings. 124 I'm not saying you can't make a statement that you're unsure about 125 (and could therefore call "probably true") or that you can't make a 126 more accurate statement (closer to the Truth) and call it "truer" 127 than another statement, but in the absolute sense a statement's 128 meaning is always either true or false. 129 130 > That Is why I said it is almost impossible to make a true 131 > statement about reality. 132 > The statement must be able to stand on it's own. 133 134 If you mean that the statement must stand alone without its meaning, 135 I agree completely with your conclusion. It is already divorced 136 from reality, therefore it can have no correlation with it. It is, 137 however, very easy to make a statement whose meaning is true - just 138 make a statement and it's complement - one and only one meaning can 139 be true. If you wish to make the distinction, I'll concede that a 140 sentence, stripped of its meaning, cannot be logically evaluated, 141 but once a meaning has been assigned (through the rules of the 142 language, etc.), that meaning must have a truth value or be 143 paradoxical. 144 145 >Likewise, "This sentence is false" can't be a paradox, because the only means 146 >of parsing it that will even give it the appearance of one is English. English 147 >st a "formal system". Thus it can't have paradoxes... 148 149 Sure, "This sentence is false." makes a great English sentence. It 150 has a subject, a verb, etc.. One can apply the laws of English to 151 it and come up with a meaning. However, if one applies logic to 152 that meaning, one will discover that it is nonsensical. I fused 153 the two steps in earlier discussions because we were discussing 154 facts, not language (perhaps I should not have). 155 Hmmm, differentiating the steps does bring into account 156 another level of abstraction, and this *could* make the sentence 157 non-self-referential since the *sentence* would fall under the 158 category of English, while the *meaning* of the sentence would 159 be in the realm of logic. False wouldn't be a terribly applicable 160 adjective to an English sentence, but I see where you might 161 conclude that the sentence is not about its meaning. This would 162 be a nice convention for self-referentials (doesn't really apply 163 anything else) if it is consistent with the rest of the language. 164 Is this what you meant? This makes sense to me. 165 166 "If I had a mine shaft, I don't think I would just abandon it. _ 167 There's got to be a better way." /#) 168 -Jack Handey, "Deep Thoughts" n n n (#/ 169 / ~~~ ~~~ \/ 170 */*/*/*/*/*/*/ -swob (a Self-Willed Orange Blancmange) /___/____\__\ 009=Usr:219 Friar Mossback 09/09/89 23:14 Msg:4331 Call:23854 Lines:6 171 [][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] 172 I promise. A story entry some time before Monday 173 is over. Lots Happening right now. 174 [][][][][][][][] Friar [][][][][][][][][][][] 175 PS Milch- 2 file boxes so far, through 1985. 176 [][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][] 010=Usr:4 Milchar 09/10/89 01:19 Msg:4332 Call:23858 Lines:6 177 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 178 Friar: Let me know how the print head on your printer holds up. 179 It seems to me that printer manufacturers could use the BWMS archives 180 as a print test. "Our printers are tough- three archives later, they 181 still are going strong!" :-) 182 ++++++++++++++++++++++++ Milch ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 011=Usr:1 CISTOP MIKEY 09/10/89 11:51 Msg:4333 Call:23864 Lines:5 183 A survey of hotel bills from last year's National Religious Broadcasters 184 Association convention found that 80% of them watched an X-rated movie 185 in the privacy of their rooms. Just doing a little research on the enemy, 186 we suppose. 187 *************************** CM ***************************************** 012=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 09/10/89 18:08 Msg:4334 Call:23873 Lines:17 188 &*&*&*&*'s 189 Not much happening here today. 190 191 I went on an album buying sprey last weekend. (BTW swob, how are your 192 aquisitions?) Boght three of the B52's albums, Dire straights Making movies 193 and They Might be Giants first Album. Not a dud in the bunch. I especially 194 like a line from on of the TMBG's song. 'Life is just a mood ring we're 195 not allowed to see.` 196 197 Fun stuff and well worth the money. And barring theft I'll be able to enjoy 198 them for years, as I long ago gave up vinyle. It really is nice to be 199 able to get the alternate groups in a more lasting format. 200 201 An Astral Dreamer (Who has trouble finding people to listen to some of the 202 stuff he buys.) 203 &*&*&*&*'s 204 013=Usr:322 Stray Cat 09/10/89 18:27 Msg:4335 Call:23875 Lines:4 205 206 I don't think sysops should be allowed to take vacations or get new girl- 207 friends ... 208 014=Usr:1 CISTOP MIKEY 09/10/89 20:18 Msg:4336 Call:23876 Lines:1 209 or have computers that don't work.... ;-9 015=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 09/11/89 15:47 Msg:4337 Call:23887 Lines:2 210 WorkLurk. 211 016=Usr:368 Nemesis Warlock 09/11/89 17:01 Msg:4338 Call:23888 Lines:21 212 :::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::==== 213 Friar: Okay then, I guess it would be for the best if I gave you a little 214 update on what is going on, since I think the disk that contained my last 215 literary entry was on scrolled away into the inky blackness of he Archives. 216 As we have it now, Friar is on the road, following the girl, with the two 217 strangers from the Inn far behind him. 218 Then the Cloaked Man appears, states that Friar is responsible for "crimes 219 against his world" and points a thin strip of steel that appears to be a 220 bent coat hanger at his intended target, citing his responsibility as "the 221 Judge, the One who Decides, and the One Who Carries Out." 222 Brief Description Run-Down: The Cloaked Man is, of course, cloaked in a blue, 223 sparkling shroud, with gold fasteners. His voice carries a metallic tint, and 224 his eyes appear misted over. What would appear to be electrical energy courses 225 around him. He appeared to Friar in two different forms. First, that of a 226 green cloud (which conceals at first, since the sky of Pyrrix Aaaal is green) 227 and then in the humanoid form that now confronts him. He is dressed fairly 228 well, albiet out of place on P.A. 229 230 Just thought I'd let you know what your character saw. As I said, all of the 231 above was said earlier, but I think you might have missed it. 232 :::::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::==Zephyr::=====:::::=====:::::=====:::::==== 017=Usr:33 Mike Stanfill 09/12/89 10:31 Msg:4339 Call:23897 Lines:18 233 /*/*/*/*/*/*/* 234 Astral: My acquisitions? Much like you said, not a dud in the bunch. 235 I'm particularly pleased with the T Bone Burnett album (which 236 I bought sound unheard), but I've learned to watch it with his 237 stuff, since he *used* to dabble in near-country (yechh!). 238 I especially like the line, 'I get the feeling that as soon as 239 something appears in the paper it ceases to be true.' 240 Oh, and the entire song that's a cliche' (You Could Look It Up) 241 - a real kick when you listen close. Still not as good as Tonio, 242 tho. 243 244 "If a kid asks you where rain comes from, I think a cute thing to 245 tell him is, 'God is crying.' And if he asks why God is crying, 246 another cute thing to tell him is, 'Probably because of something _ 247 *you* did." /#) 248 -Jack Handey, "Deep Thoughts" n n n (#/ 249 / ~~~ ~~~ \/ 250 */*/*/*/*/*/*/ -swob (a Self-Willed Orange Blancmange) /___/____\__\ 018=Usr:11 L'homme sans Par 09/12/89 12:11 Msg:4340 Call:23898 Lines:4 251 *%()@#$*%_@#)_(@$)_(#@_)!$_)@#(%$)_^)_#^)_$(#^)_$#*^)_#()_($)_%()_#(%@)_$#(% 252 To you B52 buyers out there - listen close to "Private Idaho", it says a lot 253 about the socio-economic conditions of our society. Really a lot... 254 *%@*%)_@%)_^*)_#@(^)_#@(^)_^@^ L'homme sans Parity *%_)#@%_#)@(%)_#@%)_#@(%@ 019=Usr:322 Stray Cat 09/12/89 19:27 Msg:4341 Call:23909 Lines:14 255 256 @)(*^!@#+@(#$&^*#_@#$+@$_*#^)!+)(+!)@#(|!#)&!^(*%#!@#_*@+#$()@_+)#^&!)@&#% 257 258 Why don't you just tell us ??? What's B52 and "Private Idaho" anyway?? 259 And WHERE's BigHam ... he sure is shirking his responsibilities lately. I 260 LIVED by the BP. I don't know who people are elsewhere. 261 262 _^!@#+)@$(+)#!%(!#@|_)|!_#!(&@#!K!)(*#!+(@#!~%@(&^~@^(*+#_!@~(^(+~!@$_^~@ 263 264 265 And what's the deal with CBBS/NW? 266 267 ... not that it was THAT interesting ... just wonderin' 268 020=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 09/12/89 19:46 Msg:4342 Call:23910 Lines:14 269 &*&*&*&*'s 270 As for social meaning I can`t be sure as it is a bit hard to tell what is being 271 said on 'private idaho.' I'll have to listen awhile longer before I am sure. 272 273 The album it comes off of is 'Wild Planet' by the B52's. Came out in 1980. 274 Also has some other really great tracks such as 'dirty back road' and 'strobe 275 light.' It was their second album BTW. (Available now on CD.) 276 277 Does anybody know the name of their '86 album? It's the only one I need to 278 complete my collection. 279 280 An Astral Dreamer 281 &*&*&*&*'s 282 021=Usr:287 Ralph Steadman 09/12/89 19:59 Msg:4343 Call:23911 Lines:57 283 696969696969 284 9/08/89 By PATRICK McDOWELL Associated Press Writer 285 PARIS (AP) -- A year after radiocarbon tests found the Shroud of Turin to be 286 only 700 years old, a participant in a shroud symposium said Friday the bright 287 light of the Resurrection may have altered the aging process. 288 "Many of the questions boil down to this," said Jacques Evin, an engineer at 289 the Radiocarbon Laboratory of Lyon. "In the event of the Resurrection of Christ 290 would there have been a sufficient burst of light to alter the process of carbo 291 decay?" 292 The Paris International Scientific Symposium on the Shroud of Turin gave 293 "shroudies" -- dedicated students of what is purported to be the burial cloth o 294 Jesus Christ -- their first chance to contest the findings issued in October 295 1988. 296 "It is a most unusual object and it's an object that means a lot of things t 297 a lot of people," said Professor Michael Tite of the British Museum research 298 laboratory at the end of the two-day gathering. "Anything you do with it is 299 bound to cause controversy." 300 Tite was at the heart of the debate last year. He headed one of three 301 laboratories that said the shroud was made about 700 years ago, 13 centuries 302 after the death of Christ. Scientific teams from the University of Arizona and 303 University of Zurich also participated. 304 Rather than resolving questions of the shroud's authenticity, the radiocarbo 305 tests appear to have become a new source of argument. 306 The 14-yard-long cloth bears a faint, yellowish negative image of the front 307 and back of a man with thorn marks on the head, lacerations from flogging on th 308 back and bruises on the shoulders, suggestive of accounts of Christ's 309 crucifixion. 310 It has been kept in Italy's Cathedral of Turin since the Middle Ages, when 311 creation of false religious relics was widespread. The now-retired Roman 312 Catholic cardinal there, Anastasio Ballestrero, invited scientists last year to 313 test samples the size of postage stamps with radiocarbon dating techniques. 314 Datings by the laboratories ranged from 1260 to 1390. Ballestrero eventually 315 endorsed the results, but said the shroud's significance as an object of deep 316 religious faith was unchanged. 317 Few symposium participants contested the test results, but Evin and others 318 questioned whether the cloth had been altered somehow to produce an inaccurate 319 reading. 320 Tite was skeptical of Evin's theory. 321 "It seems to me a slight coincidence that, if there was a burst of radiation 322 it would have been just enough to date the cloth to the 14th century," he said. 323 Some of the 100 spectators cheered when one of their number insisted the 324 scientists had tested a piece of the cloth near a seam that was restored in the 325 16th or 17th century. 326 "We do not have a pure specimen," he declared. "It was contaminated. There 327 were threads from the 16th century extending into the main part of the shroud. 328 think we may be dealing with a clever forger who rewove the threads." 329 Tite said the results would have been affected only if 60-70 percent of the 330 cloth were rewoven. 331 John Jackson, 43, of Colorado Springs, Colo., said density measurements of 332 the frontal image on the cloth appear to show a body was lifted through it, but 333 he stopped well short of calling the phenomenon evidence of the Resurrection. 334 "I don't want to get into too much speculation on the religious 335 implications," said Jackson, who has studied the shroud for 15 years. "If the 336 shroud is medieval, then this image was formed then. 337 "I'm also open to the fact that if someone else can explain this image in a 338 conventional way, then that should take priority over mine." 339 022=Usr:287 Ralph Steadman 09/12/89 20:10 Msg:4344 Call:23912 Lines:91 340 9/06/89 By PAUL NOWELL Associated Press Writer 341 CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- A federal judge ruled Jim Bakker competent to stand 342 trial on fraud charges Wednesday after a government psychiatrist testified the 343 PTL founder was not going crazy when he broke down last week. 344 Bakker's trial resumed nearly a week after he was found hiding under a couch 345 and hallucinating in his lawyer's office last Thursday. He was sent to a federa 346 prison in Butner for psychiatric evaluation. 347 "For the first time in three years, the whole situation came home to him and 348 he began to cry," Sally Johnson, chief of psychiatric services at the prison, 349 told U.S. District Judge Robert Potter. 350 "He is not going crazy," Ms. Johnson testified with jurors absent. "He has n 351 hidden mental illness. The stress that he's feeling is normal. I can't rule it 352 out that it won't happen again, but I can't rule it in either." 353 Potter ordered Bakker released from federal marshals' custody and asked 354 Bakker, who was brought to court in leg irons and handcuffs, to stand and answe 355 qestions. 356 "Do you understand what you are on trial here for?" the judge asked Bakker, 357 who is accused of fleecing followers of his PTL ministry. 358 "Yes sir," Bakker responded quietly. 359 Asked if he was able to assist his lawyers, Bakker said, "I'm very tired, bu 360 I believe I can." 361 Bakker, 49, showed little emotion, sometimes hanging his head and staring at 362 the floor. He wore a suit his wife, Tammy Faye, had brought him. 363 Mrs. Bakker, who attended the hearing with other family members, has 364 protested her husband's treatment at the federal prison hospital. 365 "This should not be allowed in the United States of America," was her only 366 comment as she left the courthouse. 367 Potter, after meeting with attorneys in chambers, also denied defense 368 lawyers' motions for a mistrial, for a continuance and for dismissal of the 369 indictment against Bakker. 370 Bakker, who resigned from the PTL ministry in 1987 during a sex-and-money 371 scandal, went on trial Aug. 28 on conspiracy and fraud charges. Prosecutors sai 372 he used nearly $4 million in ministry funds to live in high style. 373 If convicted on all 24 counts against him, he could could receive 120 years 374 in prison and more than $5 million in fines. 375 After Wednesday's lunch break, former PTL Vice President Steve Nelson, who 376 collapsed under defense cross-examination last Wednesday, resumed testifying fo 377 the prosecution. 378 Questioned by Assistant U.S. Attorney Jerry Miller, Nelson said he went to 379 Bakker and Richard Dortch, another ex-PTL vice president, to express his concer 380 over the number of "lifetime partnerships" sold at Heritage USA, the Christian 381 retreat and amusement park created by Bakker. 382 Prosecutors contend that Bakker oversold partnerships despite his statements 383 on TV and in promotional literature that there was a limit. A $1,000 donation 384 gave a partner free lodging in the 500-room hotel three nights a year. 385 "I told them we had problems getting people in there," Nelson said. "I told 386 them we could not sell more. ..." He said Bakker and Dortch told him to keep 387 selling the partnerships. 388 Dortch, indicted with Bakker, pleaded guilty to four counts of fraud and 389 conspiracy and was sentenced to eight years in prison and a $200,000 fine. 390 Defense attorney Harold Bender, who was questioning Nelson last week when th 391 witness fainted, chose not to cross-examine him Wednesday. In the mistrial 392 motion, Bender said the collapse had prejudiced the jury against Bakker. 393 Bakker appeared more alert during Nelson's testimony. He smiled, chatted wit 394 attorneys and reviewed documents. Mrs. Bakker did not attend the afternoon 395 session. 396 Court was recessed for the day around 5:30 p.m. As Bakker left the 397 courthouse, he waved at photographers and said, "I'm glad to be out of where I 398 was." He also said he had the flu, then got into Bender's BMW sedan and left. 399 During the morning session, Ms. Johnson said her preliminary diagnosis of 400 Bakker was that he had suffered a panic attack after Nelson's collapse. Nelson 401 had testified that he had told Bakker someone could go to prison because of the 402 ministry's financial practices. 403 Bakker didn't come to court the next day, and lawyers told Potter he was 404 hallucinating and hiding his head under a couch at their office. 405 Asked if she thought Bakker had faked his emotional collapse, the doctor sai 406 n. 407 "It was a powerful emotional reaction and release," Ms. Johnson said. "The 408 weight of all these things began to coalesce. ... 409 Ms. Johnson also said Bakker suffered narcissism, or excessive 410 self-absorption, and depression. 411 The psychiatrist said the panic attack was not caused by Bakker's taking an 412 anti-depressant prescribed by his private psychiatrist, but could not rule out 413 that it had had an impact on his mental state. She also testified that Bakker 414 had taken aspirin and is taking an antibiotic for a cold. 415 Assistant U.S. Attorney Jerry Miller asked Ms. Johnson if she felt Bakker wa 416 hallucinating when he left court last week. 417 "I did not label it as hallucinatory phenomena," she replied. 418 She said Bakker told her he hadn't felt well and that radio and television 419 news crews gathered at the courthouse took on the form of frightening animals. 420 She said he told her they appeared as "large ants with antennae." 421 Ms. Johnson said Bakker insisted he hadn't lost touch with reality. 422 "He did not lose sight that they were actually the press," she said. "It was 423 an experience in which he was very frightened and there was a large number of 424 people in the crowd." 425 426 So...who's to say what's "real news" and what's "more of the story"...or right 427 or left for that matter. Lee Atwater was unavailable for comment on either. 428 429 696969696969696969 430 023=Usr:379 Phoenix Polymorp 09/12/89 21:36 Msg:4345 Call:23915 Lines:6 431 This is Phoenix Polymorph. What I want to know is: What happened to the Blue 432 Parratdt6268009 433 Parrot? 434 ^p 435 436 024=Usr:13 voyeur 09/12/89 23:18 Msg:4346 Call:23917 Lines:15 437 :::::::::O O:::::09/12/89::::::::::::::::::::::::::23:35:17:::::::::O O::::::: 438 Blue Parrot - Mike took it down last weekend while taking off for a few days 439 of vacation. When he tried to bring it back up, it wouldn't 440 work. Last I heard he suspected a (hard disk?) power supply. 441 No idea what the current status is. Check on Applephilia. 442 CBBS/NW - Last week they warned that service might be interrupted while 443 made some changes to the software. I don't think they planned 444 to be down this long. I remember they were thinking of removing 445 the 9600 baud modem from the board since it wasn't being utilized, 446 and as you may recall, when they *added* the 9600 there were 447 problems with the autobaud detect code. Maybe they're having 448 difficulties reverting to the old code. 449 BackWater - An oversupply of reposted news, coupled with a dearth of stories. 450 This is the most serious BBS casualty of all... 451 ::::::::::O O::::::::::::::::::::voyeur::::::::::::::::::::::::::O O:::::::::: 025=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 09/12/89 23:34 Msg:4347 Call:23918 Lines:9 452 &*&*&*&*`s 453 About BW, the way to solve the problem is not to complain about it, but rather 454 to do somthing about it. I'm currently between apartments, and am limited on 455 my bbsing time. So I can't see myself contributing much in the story area 456 for awhile. 457 458 An Astral Dreamer 459 &*&*&*&*'s 460 026=Usr:70 Kurfur Redlig 09/13/89 16:30 Msg:4348 Call:23926 Lines:6 461 KKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKurfur Redlig | It's only 5:30 and I'm tireddddddddddddddd 462 463 Reality is questionable, only imagination is definate. 464 465 KKKKurfur Redlig | I must have had fun last night, but I can't rememberrr 466 027=Usr:368 Nemesis Warlock 09/13/89 19:30 Msg:4349 Call:23929 Lines:8 467 468 FLASH! 469 470 BACKWATER INVADED BY INANE REPORTERS! 471 472 NUCLEAR WAR BEGINS AT 6:00 PM TODAY! 473 474 FILM AT 11:00! 028=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 09/13/89 21:47 Msg:4350 Call:23933 Lines:129 475 &*&*&*&*'s 476 Well, I thought I'd do somthing about the dirth of stories here on backwater. 477 What follows is a first draft of a short story that just sort of wrote 478 itself. Comments will be greatly appreciated. 479 You can't always be sure of the things you say. Somtimes even the 480 The most well respected fact will turn out to be wrong. Take for instance 481 last Saturday. I was sitting on a barstool down at Ernies. Don't get the 482 idea that I go there often, because I don't. I just happened to be there. 483 It was the ussual crowd, Only the lonely frequent these halls. Not that that 484 is altogether bad. Lonely people can have some of the most interesting stories 485 to tell. 486 487 So I sat there, waiting for somthing to happen. Not expecting it, just 488 waiting. I waited till near closing. Then when I'd almost given up hope 489 it happened. 490 491 Ahm, She walked in... No, nothing as cliche' as that. It was actually 492 a largish grey rat. It came running from behind the bar, and almost 493 imediatly I could hear Ernie cursing and calling after it. "Jennings 494 you swine, get back here and into your cage." 495 496 Jennings? Who names a rat Jennings and sticks it in a 497 cage behind a bar? I hadn't thought Ernie anywhere near that imaginative. 498 499 The rat wasn't buying it. He just kept running. Looked like the front 500 door was his destination. I layed my money down on the table and got out 501 just behind him, with Ernie on my heels. It was dark, and most of the cars had 502 left the parking lot. I only lived a block or so away, so a car was the least 503 of my wories. Ernie had ran passed me and was yelling at the top of his 504 lungs in alternite directions. "Jennings! You scoundrel! Get back here!" 505 He kept it up for the better part of an hour. The cops came out twice, and 506 the second time they carted him off. The patrons had been taking care of 507 the bar during the owners little 'illness'. 508 509 I walked behind the counter and checked the till. It looked like 510 somebody had been sober enough to recognize the possibilities there. That 511 meant there was no percentage in it for me, atleast from that angle. So 512 I grabbed a couple of crackers from the bar and went outside. Being in front 513 of Ernie I had seen a bit more. So I walked over to the Dumpster and dropped 514 a cracker. "Ok Jennings you can come out now, he's gone." 515 516 "Not bloody likely. I don't even know you." 517 518 "So, do you want to sit under that trashcan for the rest of your days 519 or do you want come out and talk business." Silence, or the closest thing 520 you can get to it in the big city. "Look, We can do this easy, or we can 521 do it hard. So make it easy on both of us and come out." 522 523 "Say I did, whats in it for me?" 524 525 I smiled, my hunch had been correct. "Depends on the circumstances." 526 527 "Such as?" 528 529 "How did you happen to become a rat in a cage in the back of the 530 bar at Ernies." 531 532 "Oh, that. Well, you know how it is. I had a bad day." 533 534 "Do tell." 535 536 "You really want to hear this?" 537 538 "Yes." 539 540 "Well, I used to be a cockerspanial. Then one day I woke up as a rat. 541 That was a bit of a shock. Especialy since I'd been curled up next to 542 Solips, the family cat. Luckily I managed to get out of there before he 543 noticed me. Out the cat door and into the street. I've been running ever 544 since." 545 546 "And before that?" 547 548 "I was one of those big sea turtles. A fun life, and not to bad if you 549 know how to avoid the pitfalls. had to be carefull though, speed wasn't 550 my strong point back then." 551 552 It was all starting to make sense to me. All that was left was arranging 553 payment. "I'll bet you started life out as a human?" 554 555 "Yep, near as I can figure it I started life out as a tinker in medieval 556 England." 557 558 "And did a brass ring come into your possesion a short time before 559 these problems started?" 560 561 "Let me thing... Could have been, it's been a century or two you know." 562 563 "Well then, I think I can solve your problem. All I want is the ring." 564 565 "Your welcome to it, if I have it and if you can get to it." 566 567 "Good, are you going to come out from under there now?" 568 569 "Oh sure." 570 571 Out he waddled, one of the biggest rats I had ever seen. He looked up 572 at me in anticipation. "Well?" 573 574 "One last question, why were you in that cage?" 575 576 "Ernie caught me mumbling to myself in his storage room. had me netted 577 before I knew what was happening." 578 579 I could believe Ernie had had the oppurtunity to develope such skills. 580 I pulled the wand from the inner pocket of my coat. Mumbled the words to 581 the unbinding and stood back. The spot that had held the rat a moment 582 before now held a short brown haired man dressed in the clothes of 583 a medieval merchant. And on the ring finger of his left had was a brass 584 ring. "Hurry, and give me the ring." 585 586 "No problem, happy to be rid of it." He replied. He took it from his 587 finger and handed it to me. This was going to be well worth my trouble, 588 I'd recovered one of my earlier devices and saved myself a finders fee. 589 590 "Now all I have to do is figure out how to make a living." 591 592 "You shouldn't have any problems with that. Theres always work available 593 for a craftsman, even today." I placed the wand back in its hiding place 594 and stuck the ring in another of my many pockets and bid him farewell. 595 "Yes," I thought. "Still work for craftsman." 596 597 598 This is the first thing I've written since last march. Some of you will 599 understand that date. I'm hoping I'll be able to keep it up. 600 601 An Astral Dreamer 602 &*&*&*&*'s 603 029=Usr:287 Ralph Steadman 09/13/89 22:32 Msg:4351 Call:23935 Lines:60 604 696969696969 605 APn 09/12/89 By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL Associated Press Writer 606 WASHINGTON (AP) -- Anti-nuclear activists today protested the launch next 607 month of a nuclear-powered space probe, but administration officials say 608 President Bush will not block the flight. 609 The president is expected by next week to authorize the use of a 48-pound 610 nuclear generator to provide electrical power for the Galileo spacecraft, 611 scheduled for launch to Jupiter from the shuttle Atlantis on Oct. 12. 612 The nuclear powerplant is similar to the one the Voyager 2 spacecraft used s 613 successfully on its 12-year journey to Neptune and beyond, and on 21 other spac 614 devices. But protesters worry about a release of radioactivity should the 615 Atlantis have an accident similar to the one that destroyed Challenger. 616 A recent safety analysis by the National Aeronautics and Space Administratio 617 concluded, "the probability of an accident resulting in a release of plutonium 618 ranges from 1-in-2,500 to 1-in-2 million and any release from these low 619 probability events would be very small." 620 About a half dozen sign-carrying protesters stood outside NASA's national 621 headquarters today, passing out a flyer that said, "Keep Project Galileo's 622 plutonium on the ground." 623 One sign said, "If Galileo explodes, kiss Florida goodbye," and another said 624 "One pound of plutonium could kill every person on Earth." The demonstrators 625 represented the Maryland Safe Energy Coalition, which is headquartered in 626 Columbia, Md. 627 This weekend, a group called the Florida Coalition for Peace and Justice, 628 says it will begin a 200-mile "peace walk" from Cape Canaveral to Kings Bay, 629 Ga., to protest both the Galileo probe and the Trident missile program. 630 A spokesman said the walk will be completed Oct. 8 and the protesters will 631 return in time for the Atlantis launch. 632 "We are going to attempt to enter the launch area and sit on the launch pad" 633 to halt the October launch, said Bruce Gagnon of Orlando, leader of the Florida 634 group which has staged past demonstrations against Trident launches. 635 King's Bay is where the Trident is flight tested. 636 A lawyer for the Christic Institute, Larry Sinkin, said the group will file 637 suit in federal court later this month to stop the Atlantis launch, citing amon 638 its reasons "the very poor record NASA has of estimating risks" and "the 639 reliability of the shuttle itself." 640 The president's science advisers are studying risk assessments of the launch 641 and a separate safety evaluation, Thomas P. Rona, deputy director of the White 642 House Office of Science and Technology Policy, said Monday. 643 An administration source who spoke on condition of anonymity, asked if the 644 Galileo launch will be approved, replied "certainly." 645 Rona declined to say what the recommendation to Bush will be but said "every 646 possible design precaution has been taken. ... My personal opinion is that the 647 shuttle is far more reliable now than before." 648 Elizabeth Prestridge, spokeswoman for the National Space Council which is 649 chaired by Vice President Dan Quayle, said the staff considers the Galileo prob 650 safe. And a congressional source said there is no doubt the president will allo 651 the launch. 652 The review process, which makes White House approval mandatory before nuclea 653 iotopes can be launched into space, has been in effect since 1977. 654 The nuclear devices are called RTGs, for radioisotope thermoelectric 655 generators. They have never caused a spacecraft failure, although three of the 656 22 have been involved in space mission accidents with no release of plutonium. 657 Galileo will be the first spacecraft to orbit Jupiter and it will insert a 658 probe into the atmosphere to investigate thick cloud layers covering the huge 659 planet. The trip is a complicated one in which the spacecraft will twice return 660 near Earth for gravity boosts to gain necessary velocity to reach Jupiter in 661 1995. 662 Would YOU risk the life of EVERY PERSON on earth with 1 in 2500 odds? 663 030=Usr:287 Ralph Steadman 09/13/89 22:44 Msg:4352 Call:23936 Lines:67 664 Nomination for the "Ten Best Censored Stories of 1987" 665 666 PROJECT GALILEO SHUTTLE TO CARRY LETHAL PLUTONIUM 667 668 Despite scientific warnings of a possible disaster, NASA is 669 pursuing plans to launch the Project Galileo shuttle space probe which 670 will carry enough plutonium to kill every person on earth. 671 Theoretically, one pound of polutonium, uniformly distributed, 672 has the potential to give everyone on the planet a fatal case of lung 673 cancer. Galileo will have 49.25 pounds of plutonium on board, most of 674 it plutonium 238, a radioisotope 300 times more radioactive than the 675 one used as fuel for atomic bombs. 676 Critics of the plan, such as Dr. John Gofman, professor of 677 medical physics at the University of California, Berkeley, and Michio 678 Kaku, professor of nuclear physics at the City University of New York 679 claim that putting Galileo's plutonium payload into space is both 680 risky and unnecessary. 681 The plutonium will be used to fuel "radioisotope thermoelectric 682 generators" which keep instrumentation warm. Although NASA and the 683 DOE say there are no alternatives, professor Kaku asserts that the 684 latest advances in solar cells make it possible to generate solar 685 electricity even as far away as Jupiter, Galileo's destination. 686 NASA downplays the possibility of the release of plutonim in an 687 accident, stressing that the substance will be encapsulated in "clads" 688 made from iridium alloy in a graphite shell. The DOE contends that 689 clads can withstand explosive pressures up to 2,200 pounds per square 690 inch. However, a DOE safety analysis report on the Galileo mission 691 obtained under FOIA states that from the viewpoint of potential 692 nuclear fuel release, the most critical accidents would occur on the 693 launch pad. Launch pad accident scenarios, such as "tipovers" and 694 "pushovers" are estimated to generate explosive pressures as high as 695 19,600 psi. 696 Once in space, Galileo is still potentially danglerous. Since 697 the solid-fuel rocket substituted for the highly volatile liquid-fuel 698 Centaur rocket used in the Challenger does not have the power of the 699 Centaur, NASA devised a plan to use the earth's gravitational pull to 700 increase the rocket's momentum sufficiently to reach Jupiter. During 701 the "flyby" orbits around the earth, Galileo would at times be only 702 277 miles overhead. A 1987 NASA report estimates the chance of 703 Galileo inadvertently reentering the earth's atmosphere to be less 704 than one in a million, and, as such, an accident scenario is deemed 705 not credible. 706 NASA set the probability figures for the chance of a shuttle 707 accident at one in 100,000 for thhe Challenger. Investigation 708 following the crash put the figure at closer to one in 25. 709 While "The Lethal Shuttle: Plutonium Payload Scheduled" was one 710 of the top 10 overlooked stories cited by Project Censored in 1986, 711 the continued failure of the media to draw attention to the potential 712 risk of Project Galileo fully warrants its renomination for 1987. 713 714 SOURCES: THE NATION, 1/23/88, "The Space Probe's Lethal Cargo," 715 by Karl Grossman;, pp 1, 78; L.A. TIMES, 2/6/86. 716 717 okay, Is it 1 chance in 2500, or 1 chance in 25 of a shuttle disaster? 718 Doesn't really matter much when we're all gasping for air with failing lungs. 719 While I'm all for space exploration, and loved the Voyager revelations, it 720 seems that this is an unneccessary risk, since there ARE alternatives. Just 721 another way of dealing with the drug problem, and all other problems too. No 722 more worrying about the national debt for old George, he'll be in his bunker 723 with all the other wealthy Republicans, counting their HUD money, snorting 724 Noriega's cocaine, and laughing at all us poor, dead, suckers. 725 YOUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK. 726 727 696969696969696969 728 729 sleep well tonight. Dan Quayle is next in line.... 730 031=Usr:498 Hagbard Celine , 09/13/89 23:48 Msg:4353 Call:23938 Lines:70 731 {} 732 733 Pathetic. 734 735 Choose: NO CREDIT or LOVE. Which means more to you? 736 737 Who is worse: the liberal, moderate or conservative Democrats, or 738 the liberal, moderate or conservative Republicans? 739 740 How do you judge a person: by their physical appearence, by 741 their emotional capacity, by their intelligence and brilliance, or 742 by the morals and laws of institutions? Or would you rather 743 prefer situational ethics to this? 744 or 745 by that dim but persistent 746 image of him/her, hiding behind all of this, the same image you hae 747 had all of your life - the ideal mate? Is a person worth something 748 in terms of your values? Are they worth something in terms of 749 their capacity to be human and their actions as so? 750 751 Do you hate landsharks around Portland? You've met them at least 752 once - the slick new car salesperson, the behind-the-counter attendant, 753 thBMW next to you at the light with the suit'n'shades... 754 Do you pity them? 755 Do you try to teach or communicate with them? 756 Do you ignore them? 757 758 Before the flames of the board engluf me and turn me into 759 Texas Style Bar - B - Que, consider that I too have felt all of the 760 above, at least once in my life. I do not sport a "correct" answer, 761 in fact, I'm not so sure there is an answer, but it seems there is 762 a Solution or Path to follow - that is, a course of action that should 763 be continued but not placed as the Final Result. Pain is both real and 764 imagined. This last sentence is True to me - DO NOT ATTEMPT TO TELL 765 ME OTHERWISE - for you are not me, and have not experienced the different 766 effects of this. After a lecture on the concept of reality, I had a 767 splitting headache that, reguardless of my actions or what I concentrated 768 on, would NOT GO AWAY. I asked my instructor, "if what you're saying is 769 true, then I should be able to make my headache disappear." "Well, 770 yes, something like that..." he replied. So I closed my eyes, and told 771 myself that the headache did not exist 3 times. By the third time, my 772 headache DISAPPEARED completely, and did not return, no matter how many 773 times I tried to re-evaluate the lecture that started it. From 774 that day forth, I understood but did not realize the concept of 775 self-fulfilling prophicies and self-programming. Only now, two 776 years later, have I begun to search for this skill again. And you 777 think me not to be in contact with reality? Sometimes I wonder about 778 the world. I wonder what would happen if the 80% that had not suddenly 779 sealed off the 20% that did have, buy "doing their own thing"; starting 780 a new economy and ethical system, and bartering and understanding and 781 helping each other, instead of SERVING. ometimes I become so sick 782 from the menial job that I have that I have to call in sick for a day 783 to escape the pain - data entry is certainly the "Sweatshop" job of the time - 784 and I ponder about how I could escape from this, and become 785 non-dependent without hurting others. 786 787 I must not despair - that is the one thing that we are actually 788 Taught to do. I promised that my future child WILL NOT SUFFER from 789 the conditioning and enslavement of the public education system - 790 which I also understand from my years of living with my father, an 791 Art teacher and Union President (ag! yech!) - is their hope? 792 Am I truely alone, in a world of insane and damaged people who 793 would rather hurt others than to help themselves heal? 794 795 Or is my schizophrenic writing simply a "soft-centered approach"? 796 797 Hagbard Celine 798 799 {} 800 032=Usr:498 Hagbard Celine , 09/14/89 00:19 Msg:4354 Call:23939 Lines:10 801 {} 802 803 As I said earlier, and I say now (about my last entry) 804 805 pathetic. 806 807 H. Celine 808 809 {} 810 033=Usr:286 Jeff Marten 09/14/89 01:47 Msg:4355 Call:23941 Lines:28 811 812 813 {+}{+}{+}{+} 814 815 Reptiles make enriching pets. 816 I have a pair of South American Anoles in a fish tank in my 817 living room; average sized chameleons that can almost glow a 818 fluorescent green if they want to. 819 820 Stare into the face a lizard for a while, late at night, and 821 you can almost hear the far away ticking of evolutionary 822 clockwork. 823 824 Right now an arrogant, high strung breed of large-brained, 825 hairless monkey thinks its ruling the earth, but Things Used To 826 Be Different...and they could be again. Reptiles used to rule 827 the earth too, but it didn't last. 828 7 829 The lizards in my fish tank are a dumb and mute reminder that 830 no beast stays at the top of the food chain forever. 831 832 -+|[ ThingFish ]|+- 833 You Ain't Nothin' But A Reptile - Slimin' All The Time... 834 835 836 {+}{+}{+}{+} 837 838 034=Usr:368 Nemesis Warlock 09/14/89 16:15 Msg:4356 Call:23958 Lines:1 839 AND AMERICA MARCHES ON! 035=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 09/14/89 19:57 Msg:4357 Call:23963 Lines:7 840 &*&*&*&*'s 841 Not much action tonight. Where's the BBS party? Or I suppose this could just 842 be one of those cosmic lulls hinted at by the magic of fractals. 843 844 An Astral Dreamer 845 &*&*&*&*'s 846 036=Usr:379 Phoenix Polymorp 09/14/89 20:06 Msg:4358 Call:23964 Lines:9 847 THIS IS WORLD WATCH THREE>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>14-SEP-89 848 849 VOTED TOP CENSORED STORY AT NETWORK ZERO 850 851 852 For world watch three, I'm Phoenix Polymorph 853 >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> 854 ^p 855 037=Usr:70 Kurfur Redlig 09/14/89 20:53 Msg:4359 Call:23965 Lines:21 856 KKKKKKKKKKKKKurfur Redlig | Hmmmm. Project Galileo huh ?????????????????? 857 858 Personally, the prospect of every living thing on the planet being 859 wiped out doesn't seem to bother me. I mean, once it's happened, it 860 won't really bother us much since we'd all be dead, and there won't be 861 much we'll be able to do about it anyways. Besides, I think the only 862 nuclear explosion capable of wiping out all life is one sheathed in 863 cobalt. We've had a lot more plutonium massed together before and 864 exploded it (remember Nagasaki history buffs?) and it didn't affect 865 the whole planet very much (although it was a bit of an inconvenience 866 for the Japanese it killed). One pound of plutonium may be able to 867 kill all life on the planet, but not when it is exploding, and you'd 868 have to distribute it pretty widely too. 869 870 Besides, who needs Florida anyhow? After all, it's only an extension 871 of Disney-World. 872 873 KKKKKKKKKKurfur Redlig | Eat, Drink, and Be Merry etc.................... 876 038=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 09/15/89 15:15 Msg:4360 Call:23976 Lines:8 877 &*&*&*&*'s 878 The whole thing sous rather like a case of quoting out of context. 879 Besides, if we don't get off of this plat in the next 100 years we'll all 880 be dead anyways. (The human race that is.) 881 882 An Astral Dreamer 883 &*&*&*&*'s 884 039=Usr:29 The Bard 09/15/89 20:26 Msg:4361 Call:23982 Lines:19 885 As for the RTG's on Galileo, similar units were used to power the instrument 886 packages that the Apollo missions left on the moon. Remember Apollo 13? It had 887 one aboard. When the astronauts abandoned the LM, the RTG was still aboard. 888 Measurement taken after the mission indicate that the RTG must have survived 889 reentry intact. So much for the risks when Galileo makes it's swings past 890 here on its way to Jupiter. 891 It's also fairly certain that even in a Challenger type accident the RTG would 892 survive intact. And even if it *did* break open, the stuff wouldn't spread far. 893 Finally, statements like "evenly distibuted one pound of plutonium could kill 894 everyone on earth" *less* truthful than a statement such as "properly 895 distibuted, one man's ejaculation could get every woman on earth pregnant". 896 That's the kind of spreading around they are talking about. And the dosage they 897 are calling *lethal* is based on taking an *old* figure for ALLOWABLE YEARLY 898 INDUSTRIAL EXPOSURE and calling that "lethal". 899 In short, these people are fear-mongering zealots who won't let mere facts 900 interfere with their holy crusade against anything with the word "nuclear" 901 in it. 902 Bah! 903 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~BARD~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 040=Usr:70 Kurfur Redlig 09/15/89 21:06 Msg:4362 Call:23984 Lines:5 904 905 906 Nuke 'em till they glow, and then shoot 'em in the DARK! 907@The end on one century... The beginning of a new one. 908 041=Usr:33 Mike Stanfill 09/15/89 22:00 Msg:4363 Call:23985 Lines:14 909 /*/*/*/*/*/*/* 910 Astral: I think the B52's 1986 album was called "Bouncing Off the 911 Satellites". They also made a single for the soundtrack to 912 "Earth Girls are Easy" called "Shake That Cosmic Thing" - is 913 is this the same as the title track to the new album??? 914 915 "It makes me mad when I go to all the trouble of having Marta cook up 916 about a hundred drumsticks, then the guy at Marineland says, 'You 917 can't throw that chicken to the dolphins. They eat fish.' 918 Sure they eat fish, if that's all you ever give them! _ 919 Man, wise up." /#) 920 -Jack Handey, "Deep Thoughts" n n n (#/ 921 / ~~~ ~~~ \/ 922 */*/*/*/*/*/*/ -swob (a Self-Willed Orange Blancmange) /___/____\__\ 042=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 09/16/89 00:19 Msg:4364 Call:23989 Lines:10 923 &*&*&*&*'s 924 Thanks swob. I bought a book yesterday that has stuff about 925 alternate bands and it has al sorts of interesting things about groups like 926 the B52's, REM, Pylon, Blondie, The GO GO`s etc ad infinitum. (Well maybe 927 not infinitum.) The B52's 1986 album is indeed called Bouncing off the 928 Satellites." Kind of apt in light of the current debate. :-) 929 930 An Astral Dreamer 931 &*&*&*&*'s 932 043=Usr:4 Milchar 09/16/89 00:59 Msg:4365 Call:23990 Lines:13 933 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 934 Use solar power at Jupiter? Hold it a minute. Solar power might suffice 935 for *some* equipment at Earth distance, but we're talking about light 936 energy at Jupiter- does the phrase 'inverse-square law' mean anything to 937 you? I don't remember the distance figures for Jupiter at the moment, but 938 I'm betting heavy money that the light flux at Jupiter would be less than 939 1/4th that at Earth distance. Perhaps the equipment on Galileo takes a 940 wee bit more energy to power than that on Voyager? Granted, this is an 941 off-the-cuff estimate of power needs and light availability, but even so 942 I canna see where else you're gonna get that much power, Captain. 943 Does anyone have concrete figures on Solar cell efficiency, and distance 944 figures for Jupiter? Solar flux at Earth and Jupiter orbits? 945 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Milch ++++++++++++++++ my $0.02 ++++++++++ 044=Usr:286 Jeff Marten 09/16/89 03:44 Msg:4366 Call:23993 Lines:42 946 947 948 {+}{+}{+}{+} 949 950 In case you missed them kids: here are the 951 952 Top Ten Reasons Exxon Is Leaving Alaska 953 DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD 954 955 956 10) Sometimes had to drive miles to find a Liquor Store 957 958 9) Planning a big oil spill off of California 959 960 8) Going to start the really big job of cleaning up Exxon 961 station restrooms 962 963 7) Somebody thought they saw Bigfoot 964 965 6) Just got contract to take off Tammy Bakker's makeup 966 967 5) Decided that black gunk covering coastline and wildlife 968 actually looks kind of cool 969 970 4) Big party this weekend at Captain Hazelwood's 971 972 3) Wanted to be there to give Zsa Zsa all the support she 973 needs 974 975 2) Time to face the fact that Batman isn't going to answer 976 the Bat Signal 977 978 1) Have to move on to screw up bigger and better things 979 980 981 -+|[ ThingFish ]|+- 982 I'm Here To Help 983 984 985 986 {+}{+}{+}{+} 987 045=Usr:393 Byron O'Brien 09/16/89 12:06 Msg:4367 Call:23995 Lines:9 988 ]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[ 989 V - V ^V 990 _ 2 1 991 a = ------- = -- 992 t - t ^t 993 2 1 994 995 (Could you ask for more? Really?) 996 ]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[]-[ 046=Usr:84 Michael Miller j 09/16/89 13:26 Msg:4368 Call:23997 Lines:3 997 Just filling the disk. 998 One more line. 999 And we're through!