home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!ferkel.ucsb.edu!ucsbcsl!ucsbuxa!lb05gate
- From: lb05gate@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu (Rick Gates)
- Newsgroups: alt.bbs.internet
- Subject: November Hunt Results
- Message-ID: <6725@ucsbcsl.ucsb.edu>
- Date: 16 Nov 92 23:55:19 GMT
- Sender: root@ucsbcsl.ucsb.edu
- Lines: 989
-
-
- ***************************************************************
- * *
- * RESULTS OF THE NOVEMBER 92 INTERNET HUNT *
- * *
- * (warning: extremely long message) *
- * *
- * (lean quite heavily on the delete key) *
- ***************************************************************
-
- The winner for this months Hunt is:
-
- Hope N. Tillman
- Director of Libraries
- Babson College
- Babson Park MA 02157-0310
-
- Hope scored the maximum points, 49, in an entry dated Sun, Nov 1, 5:10
- EST. Some of you may recall that Hope was our first winner.
- Congratulations on a job well done!
-
- I also received the first team entry for the Hunt. Congratulations to:
-
- The Polar Raiders
- The University of Tromsoe
- Norway
-
- The Polar Raiders scored 40 points.
-
- As always, if any players would like to receive their scored entry,
- feel free to send me a message.
-
- STATISTICS
- ----------
-
- Once again, we are up in total number of players, 27 in all this time.
- In addition, I received numerous messages carrying comments,
- suggestions, questions, and good words of support.
-
- A STATEMENT OF DIRECTION
- ------------------------
-
- One of the primary comments that I've received is "OK, I see how your
- players accessed the information they're after, but how do they know
- where to begin looking? Where do they start?
-
- With anything as large, dynamic and unique as the Internet, there are,
- as one might guess, many different theories about how to get started.
- These seem to fall into a couple of major camps. The *extremes* of
- these two camps are:
-
- Camp 1: Let's get this damn thing organized. We want a set of indexes
- to the whole thing so we can find out what we what, when we want, once
- and for all. Nobody wants to go looking all over creation! You learn
- only by direction.
-
- Camp 2: Are you kidding, you can't index the Internet. It's too huge!
- Not only that, but it's too dynamic. Anybody can add to it. Don't
- try fencing it in. You'll just kill it. What you need to do is jump
- in with both feet, roll up your sleeves and get your hands dirty. You
- learn only by doing.
-
- In reality there are few that would embrace either of these points of
- view. I believe that for the most part, the players are the type of
- people that both recognize the need for better, more comprehensive
- tools, but are so attracted by the volume of valuable information that
- they're willing to jump in with both feet. These are the pathfinders
- of the Net.
-
- To those that prefer to wait until the way is more established, I've
- included both answers and suggestions toward the kinds of tools and
- resources that *do* attempt to pave the way toward easier access.
-
- So keep those comments coming. As you can see, I will listen.
-
- Finally, I've received enough requests about accessing previous Hunts
- that I'm looking into ways to archive the questions, the answers, and
- assorted comments. Hopefully, this will allow me to keep overhead
- commentary (such as this), to a minimum, and allow people to get right
- to what they want.
-
- ABOUT THIS HUNT
- ---------------
-
- Some of the answers are a lot longer this time around, as I'm trying
- to include more of the strategy of searching for those that have
- requested it.
-
- Many of Hope Tillman's answers are quite good in this respect. Also
- good at showing strategy (and entertaining reading to boot), were many
- of the answers contributed by Stephen Elliott of Trent Univ. Stephen's
- answers all begin with the word Keys:.
-
- Brygg Ullmer managed to answer all the questions using only the Gopher
- server at the University of South Carolina. Brygg admits that some
- questions may be better served by accessing a resource directly
- through telnet or ftp, but it's still a good demonstration of the
- power and flexibility of Gopher. (Thank you Univ. of Minn!)
-
- Finally, thanks to the University of Arizona School of Library
- Science, and Gretchen Whitney in particular, for letting me use the
- computer lab to finish off these results while I'm here in Tucson on
- vacation. (Hey! We all have different ways to relax!)
-
- SOME STRATEGY
- -------------
-
- For an idea about how best to get started, I'll leave it again to
- Stephen Elliott. He includes the following at the top of his entry:
-
- Meta-Strategy / Game Plan
-
- I get the impression that some people are sitting alone in a dark room
- staring at a MAIL> prompt wondering how to go about doing the Internet
- Hunt. Sorry, can't be done. If nothing else, you are going to have
- to get a copy of Scott Yanoff's list [Finger yanoff@csd4.csd.uwm.edu
- to see how to do that]. In addition to that, I would highly
- recommend:
-
- 1. A copy of Zen and the Art of the Internet or similar document
- 2. At least one actual human being to teach/help you [I rely on a
- systems librarian and a computer hacker - an excellent combination].
- 3. Getting hooked up to a gopher service as soon as possible - a WAIS
- server and a trip in the WorldWideWeb would also give you an excellent
- idea of what's out there.
- 4. Hytelnet is an excellent tool, but unless it's mounted on your
- system, you need a PC to make use of it.
- 5. If all this completely baffles you then simply send notes to all
- your friends [NOT to your electronic conferences!] saying: "send me
- all the Internet stuff you have".
-
-
- THE ANSWERS
- -----------
-
- 1. (5) 'How can I get the text of the Supreme Court opinion on
- the "right to die" case CRUZAN v. DIRECTOR, MISSOURI DEPT. OF
- HEALTH?'
- (Thanks to Neal McBurnett, AT&T Bell Labs, Denver for contributing
- this question.)
-
- Winner's Answer
-
- The Supreme Court opinion text is on Cleveland Freenet in
- the Project Hermes Supreme Court opinion section. To get
- there,
-
- TELNET to freenet-in-a.cwru.edu
- Login as visitor or registered user
- At main menu, pick 4. The Courthouse and Government Center
- At next menu, pick 2. The Courthouse legal information
- At next menu, pick 6. Supreme Court Opinions (Project
- Hermes)
- At next menu, pick 6. Supreme Court Opinion File
- At Enter command, type slash enter
- slash is "/"
-
- enter is "enter key" or "return key"
- At Enter pattern to search subject, type name of case
- "CRUZAN v. DIRECTOR, MISSOURI"
- This will bring up the records from which to select
- the text of the opinion.
-
- Other Answers
- -------------
-
- USC-Math Gopher Service: Multitopic/Misc/Supreme Court rulings
- <search for "Cruzan">
-
- 88-1503 Opinions (listed first) are for this case; 91-744 rulings cite
- the precedents established by this earlier case.
-
- ----------
- ftp to info.umd.edu, cd to /info/Government/US/SupremeCt/1989term
- get file called 88-1503
-
- INDEX in /info/Government/US/SupremeCt is useful in finding
- cases by name
-
- archie was used to find "supreme", "archie -slt supreme"
-
- ----------
-
- connect to Gopher at gopher.micro.umn.edu
- Select option 5, Internet file server (ftp) sites/
- Select option 2, Popular FTP Sites via Gopher/
- Select option 15, Supreme Court Rulings (CWRU)/
- Select option 2 for Index.
-
- Files available on CRUZAN v. DIRECTOR, MISSOURI DEPT. OF HEALTH are:
- 88-1503.S: CRUZAN v. DIRECTOR, MISSOURI DEPT. OF HEALTH, Syllabus
- 88-1503.O: 88-1503--OPINION, CRUZAN v. DIRECTOR, MISSOURI DEPT. OF HEALTH
- 88-1503.C1: 88-1503--CONCUR, CRUZAN v. DIRECTOR, MISSOURI DEPT. OF HEALTH
- 88-1503.C2: 88-1503--CONCUR, CRUZAN v. DIRECTOR, MISSOURI DEPT. OF HEALTH
- 88-1503.D1: 88-1503--DISSENT, CRUZAN v. DIRECTOR, MISSOURI DEPT. OF HEALTH
- 88-1503.D2: 88-1503--DISSENT, CRUZAN v. DIRECTOR, MISSOURI DEPT. OF HEALTH
-
- The file containing the Opinion is 88-1503.O. Return to the Supreme
- Court ruling menu and select 6, Ascii. The file we are looking for is
- #44. You can have gopher mail this to you.
-
- Alternatively you could ftp to ftp.cwru.edu. The file is
- /hermes/ascii/88-1503.O.filt.
-
- ====================================================================
- 2. (7) I'm hooked on the Usenet, and I've got a great idea for a
- new newsgroup. Where can I find the steps I need to follow to
- put my machine on the Usenet?
-
- Winner's Answer
-
- Use WAIS. Telnet "QUAKE.THINK.COM" and select
- "JIK-USENET [pit-manager.mit.edu]. It is
- currently no. 170 (10/31/92).
- Pick keywords "Usenet newsgroup steps" to search.
- Among documents retrieved is the document which
- will do what you want:
- Jonathan Kamens, "How to become a Usenet site."
- You can request it to be sent to you by mail by
- selecting it and typing m (for mail) and then
- putting in your address when requested.
- Alternatively, ftp a copy from pit-manager.edu
- cd pub
- cd usenet
- cd news.announce.newusers
- get "How_to_become_a_Usenet_site."
-
- Other Answers
- -------------
-
- anonymous ftp to : pit-manager.mit.edu
- login: ftp
- password: <your own email address>
-
- go to directory: pub/usenet/news.admin
- and get the file: How_to_become_a_USENET_site
-
- In that same directory are more files that will help a starting
- usenet manager.
-
- (Rick: Several folks suggested retrieving this, and other postings
- from certain Usenet newsgroups. Though this is certainly a solution,
- I judged accessing J. Kamen's file from the FTP site a better
- solution. This is due to the fact that not all newsgroups/newreaders
- make certain postings permanent. Most newgroup postings have a
- regular expiration date. When I tried to retrieve this posting it was
- listed as expired. In order to get the information, I would have had
- to wait until the file was posted again.)
-
- ================================================================
- 3. (4) Hi, I'm learning to the play the guitar, and someone told
- me that there's a place on the network where I can get guitar
- chords for lots of different songs. What I'm looking for
- specifically is the music to a song by the Indigo Girls called
- "Closer to Fine".
-
- Winner's Answer
-
- Use anonymous FTP to ftp.nevada.edu.
- cd pub
- cd guitar
- cd Indigo-Girls
- bin
- get CloserToFine.crd
- get CloserToFine.tab
-
- You will find the guitar chords in both of these versions.
- The .crd file looks a little more recent; it also includes
- words to the song.
-
- Other Answers
- -------------
-
- USC-Math Gopher Service:
- Multitopic/Music/Music Archives (cs.uwp.edu)/Guitar TAB files from
- ftp.nev.edu.edu/Indigo_Girls/CloserToFine.Tab and CloserToFine.crd
- (Tablature and chords are included in these two files)
-
- ("archie -s closertofine" works nicely, too, returning FTP'able sources)
-
-
- ----------
-
- ftp to clouso.crim.ca, cd /pub/guitar/Indigo_Girls
- get CloserToFine.crd
-
- archie was used to find "indigo", using "archie -slt indigo"
-
- ----------
-
- Keys: chords, guitar, Indigo Girls, Closer to Fine
- Ideas: Having been around the Internet [there's no substitute for random
- explorations], I knew that there was a lyric database on WAIS and WWW, but
- rechecking these confirmed that chords were not part of that. There's always
- Archie, but since I wasn't sure what to put in [prog "guitars"? "chords"?
- "music"?] I fell back, yet again, on Scott Yanoff's list.
-
- Answer:
- "Guitar Chords/TAB" on Scott Yanoff list
- ftp ftp.nevada.edu
- cd /pub/guitar
- get README and INDEX files
- [consult files, go back in]
- cd /pub/guitar/indigo_girls
- get CloserToFine
- [somewhere in there i set Binary, but I sent it in ASCII as well - I'm still
- working on that distinction - I've had files that I could view in WordPerfect
- but not print off - so close and yet...]
-
- ============================================================================
- 4. (7) Hello, I hope you don't mind questions via e-mail. E-mail
- is all I have here in my department. I'm interested in getting a
- program called hppscrpt.zip. I found a description of it in a
- mail message from a listserv that I'm on. It's at
- wuarchive.wustl.edu and in the /mirrors2/win3/drivers/printer
- directory. I've heard there's a way to issue mail commands to
- get files via ftp. Where do I request this service, and what
- commands should I use to get this file?
-
- Winner's Answer
-
- Address email to "ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com"
- The subject can be anything you want to use to
- keep track of it. The text must say:
-
- connect wuarchive.wustl.edu
- binary
- chdir /mirror2/win3/drivers/printer
- get hppscrpt.zip
- quit
-
- There are possible variations that this may not
- cover. Before sending a file, check on its location
- by sending email to ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com with
- the text HELP.
-
- The service is called BITFTP
- This is how to access it :
-
- send a mail to : BITFTP@PUCC.Princeton.edu
-
- the body of the mail should contain the following lines:
-
- FTP wuarchive.wustl.edu UUENCODE
- USER anonymous
- CD /mirrors2/win3/drivers/printer
- BINARY
- GET hppscrpt.zip
- QUIT
-
- Other Answers
- -------------
-
- Keys: hppscrpt.zip, wuarchive.wustl.edu, /mirrors2/win3/driver/printer
- Ideas: I've finally learned to check Scott Yanoof first, and then look further
- if I have to. But I didn't. [P.S. For me, this was the neatest question on
- this Hunt - after doing it I found myself wondering why the people at
- decwrl.dec.com would be this nice - I guess I learned something about
- the Internet ethos and good will.]
-
- Answer:
- MAIL> mail
- To: IN"ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com"
- Subject: [Return]
-
- Body of Letter:
- help
-
- [You get a note back explaining to you what you do, and you send a second
- message:]
-
- MAIL>mail
- To: IN"ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com"
- Subject: November Hunt ?
-
- Body of Letter:
-
- connect wuarchive.wustl.edu
- binary
- chdir /mirrors2/win3/drivers/printer
- get hppscript.zip
- quit
-
- [I did this fairly late at night and had the response in what seemed like
- minutes. Too cool.]
-
- ==========================================================================
- 5. (2) What's Mark Watson's job at the University of Oregon
- Library?
-
- Winner's Answer
-
- Mark Watson is Head of the Cataloging Department at
- the University of Oregon Library.
- The easiest way to find that was to use Gopher.
- Telnet consultant.micro.umn.edu and login as gopher.
- If you select phone books, other institutions, and
- then North America, at listing for University of
- Oregon, fill in template, line 1, with
- "Mark Watson" and press return. The rest of the
- information is then available.
-
- If instead, you choose to go to other gophers rather
- than phone books, you can access the University of
- Oregon gopher which will give you additional info.
- Choosing the entry "Search Ducksoup by keyword"
- and typing "Mark Watson." At this point a menu
- comes up with no. 3 as "Faculty" (taken from
- the /University of Oregon/Catalog/Library)
- Select 3. Faculty, to retrieve an alphabetical list of
- faculty. On scrolling to Mark Watson, his name is
- highlighted, and additional information appears.
- He is Mark R. Watson, Assistant Professor,
- Head, Catalogue Department. His educational
- background is also given.
-
- Other Answers
- -------------
-
- head of the catalog dept.
- (from whois.uoregon.edu 43)
-
- this one was really hard! how was i supposed to know his middle
- initial was "R"?
-
- ==================================================================
- 6. (5) Someone in class today mentioned that the people that run
- the Internet have just put together a bibliography of readings
- for novice users. I know how to use ftp, but where do I find
- this bibliography?
- (Rick: I included a lot more of these answers than I normally would.
- I want novice users to have access to the wealth of material on
- getting started.)
-
- Winner's Answer
-
- It is much easier to identify this bibliography by WAIS than
- by anonymous FTP but it can be done both ways.
-
- By WAIS, telnet quake.think.com and login as WAIS.
- Select source internet-drafts at nnsc.nsf.net (current
- source number 160). I decided to start with internet-drafts
- since it seemed logical that something new would come out
- first as a draft.
- Pick keywords: novice bibliography
- Top choice is desired document:
- "FYI on Introducing the Internet--A Short Bibliography of
- Introductory Internetworking Readings for the Network
- Novice. (date October 1992)
- file name is: draft-ietf-userdoc2-fyi-novice-01.
-
- By anonymous FTP, ftp to nnsc.nsf.net.
- NNSC.NSF.NET seemed to be the right place to look for
- something put out by the folks who run the net.
- cd internet-drafts
- bin (get files as binary)
- get index-internet-drafts (to review to pick out
- internet bibiography for novice users).
- get draft-ietf-userdoc2.fyi-novice-01.
-
- While much harder than wais, anonymous ftp will work -
- just takes longer.
-
- Other Answers
- -------------
-
- This question is sort of vague, but an excellent bibliography on the
- Internet is one edited by Mary Jensen. You can find it via telnetting
- to liberty.uc.wlu.edu login as "lawlib". Select option 11 ("Local
- Files") and then option 47 ("Internet Bibliography (Jensen)").
- It can be ftped from liberty.uc.wlu.edu as "/pub/lawlib/internet.bibl".
-
- There are also bibliographies in many tutoring documents about the
- internet, for instance: Zen and the Art of the Internet, the Bay Area
- Internet FAQ (section 4), the Internet Infoguide (from SURAnet) etc.
-
- ----------
-
- WAIS comp.internet.library
- Search using keywords "bibliography novice books internet"
-
- Subject: -17- Are there any books about using the Internet?
- Date: 14 Sep 92 00:00:01 EST
-
- Yes. There are a growing number of reference books available on the subject
- of using the Internet.
-
- TITLE: Zen and the Art of the Internet: A Beginner's Guide, 2nd ed
- AUTHOR: Brendan P. Kehoe
- PUBLISHER: Prentice Hall
- ISBN: 0-13-010778-6
- PAGES: 112
- PRICE: 22.00 $US
-
- TITLE: The Whole Internet User's Guide & Catalog
- AUTHOR: Ed Krol
- PUBLISHER: O'Reilly
- ISBN: 1-56592-025-2
- PAGES: 400
- PRICE: 24.95 $US
-
- TITLE: Internet: Getting Started
- SERIES: Volume 1, Internet Information Series
- AUTHOR: [SRI International, Network Information Systems Center]
- PUBLISHER:
- ISBN: 0-944-604-15-3
- PAGES:
- PRICE: 39.00 $US
-
- ----------
-
- ftp nic.merit.edu (username: anonymous; password: guest)
- cd introducing.the.internet (change to that directory)
- get intro.internet.biblio (get the file)
-
- Note:
- 1. This file was created on October 14, 1992.
- 2. It is for beginners. The title is: FYI on Introducing the Internet---
- A Short Bibliography of Introductory Internetworking Readings
- for the Network Novice
- 3. If you ftp from a PC, or a VAX account, you should change the file
- name so that it fits the file name requirement of the system. For
- example, from a DOS PC, you should enter the following command to
- get the file.
- get intro.internet.biblio internet.bib
-
- ----------
-
- I used Archie to locate the bibliography:
-
- telnet archie.rutgers.edu
- login archie
- at the archie> prompt, enter: set search sub
- at the archie> prompt, enter: prog biblio
-
- Had to look through several hundred file listings to find it!
-
-
- ====> anonymous ftp to nis.nsf.net
- cd /introducing.the.internet
- file is intro.internet.biblio
-
- Note: The authors of this document, the Internet Engineering Task Force, do
- *not* run the Internet. There is no one body governing the Internet.
-
- ----------
-
- anonymous ftp nnsc.nsf.net
- cd resource-guide
- get resource-guide.txt.tar.Z
- quit
-
- ----------
-
- Keys: Internet, bibliography, novice users
- Ideas: One of the rules of the Internet is that the more people are likely to
- ask for something, the more places it will be. Hence the ubiquitous
- Frequently Asked Questions files. The first way that occured to me to do this
- was focus on the word Internet and simply:
-
- Answer:
- telnet quake.think.com
- login as wais
- select 160 Inernet-drafts [hit spacebar]
- Keyword search on "novice" [hit "w" to get keyword search]
- select 001 "draft-ietf-userdoc2-fyi-novice-01"
-
- [Reading this document leads you to all kinds of other things, I couldn't
- resist]
-
- ftp nic.merit.edu
- cd /introducing.the.internet
- get intro.internet.biblio [there's also some great other documents in here
- like access.guide]
-
- ----------
-
- Anonymous ftp to HYDRA.UWO.CA
- cd /libsoft
-
- Two files are possible candidates:
-
- get STANTON.BIB
- get NETWORKING_BIBLIO.TXT
-
- Stanton's bibliography is really aimed at librarians and information
- scientists, so it might be a tad much.
-
- Elliott Parker's bibliography (the second one) is much more aimed at
- the novice. He introduces it:
-
- This is some documentation on networking. There has been no
- attempt to make it comprehensive and the main focus is on
- material of use to the beginning networker, rather than
- engineers, network managers, or researchers. This is not a
- formal bibliography. The selection is somewhat eccentric and
- eclectic, but it is the type of material I wish I had known about
- when just beginning to use the networks. Some of the citations
- are just fun to read.
-
- so this is probably the one referred to. These certainly aren't the only
- sources out there.
-
- BTW, Advanced Network & Services, Inc has an archie that I used to find the
- stanton bibliography. Interestingly enough, it completely missed the
- primary libsoft site maintained by Gord Nickerson at the School of Library and
- Information Science at the University of Western Ontario (HYDRA.UWO.CA)
-
- =======================================================================
- 7. (5) In what year was Justice Byron R. White appointed to the
- U.S. Supreme Court?
-
- Winner's Answer
-
- Use WAIS, telnet to quake.think.com and login as WAIS.
- Scroll to US-Judges (pegun.law.columbia.edu) which is
- currently 298. Do a keyword search, "Byron White."
- 5 items are retrieved. The top entry lists Byron
- R. White and states his appointment by Kennedy in
- 1962.
-
- Other Answers
- -------------
-
- telnet info.umd.edu
- login: gopher
- select Info-Gopher Interface
- select Government
- select US
- select Supreme Ct
- select justices
-
- ----------
-
- gopher (telnet) to fatty.law.cornell.edu (login: gopher) to connect
- to the experimental gopher site of Cornell Law School. Select
- Government Agencies: Information and Reports/ and then US Judges'
- Database. Search for Bryan White, and you'll retrieve the same
- record as the previous one.
-
- ----------
-
- Keys: Justice Byron R. White, Supreme Court, appointed
- Ideas: I did not think going to the same source as in Question 1 would make
- sense because this is not information you would find in the decisions. I
- learned in the WorldWideWeb that there are two ways to approach information:
- by subject and by server. I thought this might be a good time to try by
- server, so I looked around in a copy of Hytelnet [very nice tool, I have it at
- home on my PC and our systems librarian mounted it on the university gopher,
- complete with connections to the sites], which got me:
-
- Answer:
- telnet sparc-1.law.columbia.edu
- login as lawnet
- select 3 Law School Info Server
- select 10 [spacebar] us-judges
- type w for keyword search
- keywords: white
- select 001 U.S. Supreme Court, Judge Byron R. Whit
- "Appointed by: Kennedy in 1962"
-
- =======================================================================
- 8. (5) Which country has a higher infant mortality rate, the
- United States, or Singapore?
-
- Winner's Answer
-
- Answer is the United States.
- Use WAIS. Telnet to quake.think.com and login as WAIS.
- Select World Fact Book at cmns.moon.think.com (which
- is currently Source number 318).
- Keywords: Singapore United States infant mortality
- Pick reference for Singapore Geography and scan until
- section on Infant Mortality: It lists 8 deaths per
- 1000 (in 1991). Pick reference for United States
- Geography and scan until section on Infant Mortality:
- It lists 10 deaths per 1000 (in 1991). I double
- checked the next listing in WAIS, "WORLD91A" which
- looked as if it had slightly more recent data but
- it gave exactly the same data for infant mortality.
-
- Other Answers
- -------------
-
- This may be a weird method, but it worked :)
- anonymous ftp to site: nic.funet.fi
- cd to directory: /pub/doc/World_Facts
- In that directory are the facts about all countries.
- get the files: Singapore and United_States
- In them are the numbers for infant mortality.
- US: 10/1000 Singaport: 8/1000
-
- ----------
-
- telent info.umd.edu
- login: gopher
- select Info-Gopher Interface
- select Government
- select Factbook91
- select Countries
- singapore #194, US #230
-
- US - Infant Mortality Rate 1991; 10 deaths/1,000 live births
- Singapore - Infant Mortality Rate 1991; 8 deaths/1,000 live births
-
- ----------
-
- telnet panda.uiowa.edu (picked this one out of a hat too)
- select: Online Info Sources
- select: Online Libraries
- select: Reference Works
- select: CIA World Fact Book 1991
- select: S
- select: Singapore
- read to find: 8 deaths/1000 live births 1991
-
- same to get to U; then select United States; 10 deaths/1000 live births 1991.
-
- ==========================================================================
- 9. (4) My cousin is graduating next spring from Columbia
- University. What day is commencement?
-
- Winner's Answer
-
- Search Columbia University cwis.
- [Good place to find cwis address is HYTELNET
- software at access.usask.ca]
- Telnet columbianet.columbia.edu.
- No login is required.
- Select Classes, Finals, Holds, Bulletins
- Select 9. Academic Calendar: Spring 1993.
- Scroll through the spring months using N (next page)
- until you reach May. The Baccalaureate ceremony
- will be held Sunday, May 16, 1993.
- Commencement will be Wednesday, May 19, 1993.
-
- ========================================================================
- 10. (4) Where can I find a review of the movie Sneakers?
-
- Winner's Answer
-
- Use WAIS. Telnet quake.think.com and login as WAIS.
- Select Movie-Reviews at bloat.media.mit.edu (which
- is currently source number 199).
- Keyword: Sneakers
- This retrieves 6 items: 5 are reviews and the 6th
- mentions Sneakers in another movie review.
- Select each entry in turn to retrieve the review.
- The reviews are by:
- Frank Maloney, 22 September 1992, from
- USENET newsgroup rec.arts.movies.reviews
- Donn B. Parker, 16 Sept. 1992, from
- USENET newsgroup comp.risks
- Roger Snappy Rubio, 28 September 1992, from
- USENET newsgroup rec.arts.movies.reviews
- 2 Fat Guys, 15. Sept. 1992, from
- USENET newsgroup rec.arts.movies.reviews
- Sarah M. Elkins, 15 Sept. 1992, from
- USENET newsgroup rec.arts.movies.reviews
-
- Other Answers
- -------------
-
- anonymous ftp to : lcs.mit.edu
- this is the rec.arts.movies.reviews database.
- go to directory: /common/movie-reviews
- here you can get the INDEX files.
- sneakers can be found in: 15xx.dir , files: 1516,1517,1518,1533,1544
-
- ----------
-
- An archive of movie reviews is available via Gopher at
- gopher.micro.umn.edu.
- Select option 4, Fun & Games
- Select option 2, Movies
- Select option 8, 1992
- Select option 9, Sep
-
- The four reviews of "Sneakers" are items 19, 20, 21, and 22.
- These were posted to rec.arts.movies.reviews sometime in the month of
- September but are archived here since most news sites don't keep news
- very long.
-
- ----------
-
- Review by Ed Cavazos in issue 1 (Sept. 1992)
- of Word, newsletter of the Austin, Texas
- chapter of the Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
- anonymous ftp ftp.eff.org
- cd /pub/EFF/local-chapters/Austin_TX
- get Word.September92
-
- =====================================================================
- Extra Credit:
- (1) How much are the quesadillas at Jose's Mexican Restaurant
- near Porter Square in Cambridge Massachusetts?
-
- Winner's Answer
-
- Quesadilla price: $2.50-$2.65. While the telephone is
- probably quicker for me since it would be a local call, I
- did find the answer using the MIT campus network since it
- seemed nearby.
- Telnet techinfo.mit.edu
- At the main menu select 12. Potluck.
- At the next menu select 7. Local Restaurants (LNF)
- At the restaurant menu, select 6. Jose's Mexican
- At this point Jose's Mexican menu appears and the
- price of the quesadilla is shown. However, I must
- point out that at the bottom of the page is a caveat that
- some of the information is out of date. An update is
- pending. That note is dated 10-10-90!
-
- Other Answers
- -------------
-
- Using libs "Internet Access Software, by Mark Resmer,
- Sonoma State University, February 1992" client, you can
- acces:
-
-
- LIBS - Internet Access Software v1.3.U (beta)
- Mark Resmer, Sonoma State University, February 1992
-
- Based on data provided by
- Art St. George, University of New Mexico
- and other sources
-
- On-line services available through the Internet
-
- Choose the number 3, 'Campus-wide Information Systems' then
-
- Campus-wide Information Systems are accessible in the following places:
-
- select the number 9, 'Massachussetts':
-
- > 12 Potluck
-
- Enter the number of your choice: 12
-
- 7 Local Restaurants (LNF)
-
- Enter the number of your choice: 7
-
- 6 Jose's Mexican
-
- Select the 6 'Jose's Mexican'. And..
-
- the price you are looking for is: Quesadilla: $2.50 - $2.65
-
- ----------
-
- I spent several hours looking for the answer to this question. I read all the
- relevant Usenet groups and their FAQs (rec.food, rec.food.restaurants,
- rec.food.veg, soc.culture.mexican, alt.restaurants...). I also searched for
- Gophers in Massachusetts. I could only find one - an experimental server at
- the University of Massachusetts, but I found nothing helpful there. I
- used Archie to look for files matching keywords such as "mexican,"
- "restaurants," "cambridge," "massachusetts," "jose" etc. Also searched the
- archives of several Bitnet lists.
-
- And at 1:11 A.M. EST this morning I found it!!!!!!!
-
- ===> telnet consultant.micro.umn.edu
- login gopher
- select Other Gopher and Information Servers
- select Terminal Based Information
- select MIT TechInfo
- select 12 (Potluck)
- select 10 [Local Restaurants (LNF) ]
- select 6 (Jose's Mexican)
-
- Price of quesadillas is $2.50-$2.65.
-
-
- (BTW, someone posted to rec.food.restaurants asking for the answer!)
-
- =====================================================================
- Mystery Question:
- As the moderator of the internet hunts, can you help me with
- something?
- I'm looking for the tides at the Golden Gate (California) for
- next April. I'm finding the information impossible to find at
- local libraries - even university libraries!!!
- Is such information available on the Internet anywhere?
-
- ----------
-
- There is some tide information available from the U.S. Geographic
- Service Earth Science Data Directory, Data Referral Service. Couldn't
- figure out how to get actual data out of it but this is what I got.
-
- ENTRY_TITLE: TIDE AND TIDAL CURRENT PREDICTIONS
- GROUP: TECHNICAL_CONTACT
- LAST_NAME: KELLEY
- FIRST_NAME: DAVE
- PHONE: (907) 271-5040
- GROUP: ADDRESS
- 222 WEST 7TH, #38
- ANCHORAGE, AK 99513-7574
- END_GROUP
- END_GROUP
- ORIGINATING_CENTER: ESDD
- LOCATION: North America> ALASKA
- LOCATION: North America> US
- PARAMETER: Ocean Dynamics> tides> TIDE
- KEYWORD: ALASKA DIRECTORY
- KEYWORD: ATLANTIC
- KEYWORD: COAST
- KEYWORD: COASTLINE
- KEYWORD: INDIAN
- KEYWORD: OCEAN
- KEYWORD: PACIFIC
- STORAGE_MEDIUM: CATALOGS/INDEXES
- GROUP: COVERAGE
- MINIMUM_LATITUDE= 0N
- MAXIMUM_LATITUDE= 179N
- MINIMUM_LONGITUDE= 105W
- MAXIMUM_LONGITUDE= 60W
- END_GROUP
- GROUP: SUMMARY
- Daily tide and tidal current predictions for the present year are
- contained in this data set. The stations in the tide table are
- for West Coast of North America and South America. Additional
- tide tables for East Coast, Central and West Africa, and the
- Western Pacific and Indian Oceans. Stations are in tidal
- current tables for the Pacific coast of North America. Included
- are reference stations and stations for 650 locations in tide
- tables. Tidal current tables list 915 locations for calculating
- tidal currents. Reference copies are available for past years.
- END_GROUP
-
- ----------
-
- "archie -s tide" returns a number of interesting refs (note that
- archie data is also directly accessible through Gopher, but I'm
- not going to synthesize this one, having found it without Gopher).
-
- Particularly interesting is the tides162.zip program, found
- at osi.iunet.it in /disk0/tmp/navy
-
- This program runs under MS-DOS, and includes data for tidal predictions at
- San Francisco, among many other locations.
-
- Also see USC-Math Gopher Service:
- Multitopic/Science and Technology/Geography/USGS ESDD, search
- for <tide tides california> for net references to offline collections
-
- The Oceanic Database at U-Del also holds promise, but... I've found the
- solution already, I think. The Oceanic service is accessible from
- USC-Math as well. I have leads on a number of other sources, as well...
-
- ----------
-
- Mystery problem- Sheech, just walk to Astronomy and ask
- who does the celestial mechanics course. Go to that person and
- ask your question. Of course that doesn't use the internet, so I
- suppose you could look your Astron. Dept. up in the Internet
- white pages, and then ask for the referal from the secretary, and
- then mail him/her with the question, if you wanted to involve the
- internet that is.
-
- ----------
-
- I tried searching "archie" for tides - pertinent responses:
- 19920326165100Z 182163 osi.iunet.it /disk0/tmp/navy/tides162.zip
- 19920326165100Z 182163 relay.iunet.it /disk0/tmp/navy/tides162.zip
- 19920323000000Z 7518 nic.funet.fi /pub/astro/general/tides.txt
- 19920211000000Z 7518 ames.arc.nasa.gov /pub/SPACE/FAQ/Tides
-
- (Rick: I tried out tides162.zip, a program written in QuickBasic in
- 1989 by an Edward P. Wallner. The program seems to work well for some
- stations on the East Coast of the U.S., and should work as well with
- West Coast stations. The catch is that you need to find historic
- tidal data for these stations. Mr. Wallner lists sites that can
- provide you with this information. Perhaps coupled with the first
- answer on data from the USGS, one could solve this problem. However,
- there does not appear to be a simple table on file, and in fact, such
- a table is only useful for short term predictions of perhaps less than
- 200 days.)
-
-
-
- --
- Rick Gates (805) 893-7225
- Dir. of Library Automation
- Univ. of California lb05gate@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu
- Santa Barbara, CA 93106
-