Thanks!
Stephanie Fuqua
chat coordinator
www.Austin360.com
sfu...@NOSPAM.cimedia.com
To reply to me personally, remove NOSPAM from address.
Wired News has already debunked this urban legend.
<http://www.wired.com/news/news/culture/story/5762.html>
Instead of doing happy fluff, how about a story on something that
matters to local Internet users ... like the UUNET death penalty.
On the other hand, maybe it's better to leave that hard reporting
stuff to the San Jose Merc and Washington Post. The Statesman can
just tear and run whatever comes on the AP feed.
--
Chip Rosenthal support CAUCE
Unicom Systems Development because junk email stinks
<http://www.unicom.com/> <http://www.cauce.org/>
: Wired News has already debunked this urban legend.
: <http://www.wired.com/news/news/culture/story/5762.html>
Best to go to the source itself. The article about the Vonnegut Urban Legend
wildfire -- written by the author of the "speech" itself (it's actually a
column) -- can be found at
http://www.chicago.tribune.com/news/current/schmich.htm
Enjoy.
-- L
I saw the same thing on the bulletin board at a business in Round Rock.
When I pointed out to the "manager" that this was an urban legend, he
shrugged, and said that he didn't put it up.
Inertia is easier than making decisions, I suppose.
--
Albert Nurick
Partner, data.net communications
alb...@data.net
http://www.data.net
>In which case I will owe the Statesman an apology. Please keep me
>advised. I tend to buy the Dallas Morning News (sorry Molly) when
>I feel a need to get ink all over my hands.
The Daily Texan is a reasonable alternative to the Austin-American
Spaceman. The Texan has all the applicable news except they do it in
12 pages.
---
Aaron Evans (aaron...@mail.utexas.edu)
IBM Open Class and OS/2 software designer
- Gordon Mohr
- g o j o m o @ i n t e r n e t m c i . c o m
bahahahahahahaahahahahahahahahahahaha!
-- L
Don't forget we have award-winning sports and entertainment sections
as well. Plus we carry the New York Times crossword puzzle. And all
this is available for free on campus or along UT shuttle bus routes.
Before anybody asks: yes, I write for them.
--
Eric M. <liz...@net-abuse.org> http://net-abuse.org/~lizardo/
******************************************************************
The Daily Texan is a might fine publication. It changes 'complexion'
with each change of editor which seems to be each semester but
I don't see a thing wrong with that. In fact, it keeps the
Texan from falling into a rut.
Cheers.
Terry at Lake Bastrop
***********************************************************************
> >
> >>The Daily Texan is a reasonable alternative to the Austin-American
> >>Spaceman. The Texan has all the applicable news except they do it in
> >>12 pages.
Just to give you my tuppence worth, the Statesman does seem to be the
biggest waste of paper I have ever had the misfortune to experience. I
mean, can anyone find the articles amongst all the advertising junk? More
to the point, can anyone finds any articles worth reading? Although the
Texan could do a lot better (getting facts straight occasionally etc), it
is far superior to that pile of wank that passes as a lame excuse for a
daily.
Actually, thinking about it, I tell a lie. It was useful once. I moved
into an apartment where they hadn't cancelled their subscription and so
the dog was able to use something as a toilet.
r.
Ah, but there is another. Starting fires in fireplaces and BBQ pits.
Gordon in Austin
Establishing solid interconnectivity between components
ensures that when you throw the computer out the window,
the printer goes with it.
I'd say Austin-American Mistakesman
Errors in Advertising & Editorial.
And the ink is so heavy, you need turpentine to get it off your hands
after reading one section.
Also the Texan let's you post web addresses on your advertisements.
>
> Just to give you my tuppence worth, the Statesman does seem to be the
> biggest waste of paper I have ever had the misfortune to experience.
> Actually, thinking about it, I tell a lie. It was useful once. I moved
> into an apartment where they hadn't cancelled their subscription and so
> the dog was able to use something as a toilet.
>
> r.
Congratulations r., you seem to have discovered one of the three main
uses for the Austin Un-American Statesman. The remaining two are,
wrapping fish and lining birdcages.
Ron
Ewww, you'd EAT fish that'd been wrapped in that toxic rag!!
I'd use it to throw out what I cleaned out of the fish, but my
dinner'd never touch it.