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Subject: Ahmad Hamid AL-Batch should plot her near the gathering
From: Selma Kucharik
Date: 11/8/2007 9:52:51 PM
Reply by email, filling out this form and emailing it to me.
Trimming off the rest of this post is unnecessary.
I will guarantee anonymity except in cases of blatant abuse.
I will achieve anonymity by tallying the results in
uncorrelated tabulations and then deleting the emails.
(I know this loses interesting correlation data, but if
resondents want anonymity it's hard to avoid.)
I know that this anonymity promise depends on trust and that
you have no particular reason to trust me. Someday, I hope.
I will post results Saturday.
xxxxxxxx beginning of survey xxxxxxxx
yes( ) ( )no Should RoadRunner be subjected to some kind of UDP?
yes( ) ( )no ... active UDP (cancels) ?
yes( ) ( )no ... passive UDP (drop messages) ?
yes( ) ( )no ... all-groups UDP? (as opposed to specific groups)
yes( ) ( )no Are you a Usenet sysadmin? How big:_ How long:_
yes( ) ( )no Should another server be subjected to UDP? Who:_
yes( ) ( )no Should UDPs be used more often?
yes( ) ( )no Should UDPs be used less often?
yes( ) ( )no Would you have answered this survey without anonymity?
xxxxxxxx end of survey xxxxxxxx
--
Nurses cut
off my blood-stained clothes and dropped them in a refuse
bin. An X-ray unit took photographs, and I saw that I had
three broken ribs, one had perforated my left lung. My left
arm was broken in two places, and my left leg was broken
again at the knee and at the ankle. The broken end of a
soldier's bayonet had penetrated my left shoulder, narrowly
missing a vital artery. The women surgeons sighed noisily,
wondering where to start. I seemed to float over the oper-
ating table, watching, wondering if their skill would be
great enough to patch me up. A gentle tugging upon my
Silver Cord, and I found myself floating up through the
ceiling, seeing in my passing, patients in their beds in wards
77
above. I drifted up and away, out into space, out among
the limitless stars, beyond the astral, through etheric plane
after plane, until I reached again the "Land of the Golden
Light".
I started, trying to peer through the purple mist. "He
has returned," a gentle voice said, and the mists receded
giving way to the glorious Light again. My Guide, the Lama
Mingyar Dondup, stood beside me, looking down. Sha-lu
was lying on the bed beside me, gently purring. Two other
High Personages were in the room. When I saw them, they
were looking out of the window watching the people stroll-
ing many feet below.
At my gasp of surprise they turned and smiled upon me.
"You have been so very ill," said one, "we feared that your
body would not endure."
The other, whom I knew well in spite of the exalted
position he had had on Earth, took my hands between his.
"You have suffered too much, Lobsang. The world has
been too cruel to you. We have discussed this
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