Since there is no clue as to when the two weeks are up, I predict that it
will develop a life of its own and drift around the net for years as a
sort of chain letter until the recipient server finds some way to stop
the responses. What do you think?
John M. Flanigan <johnf@hawaii.edu> The equation is the final arbiter.
Math Resource Instructor --Werner Heisenberg
Kapi'olani Community College The scoreboard is the final arbiter.
Honolulu, Hawaii --Bill Walton
On Mon, 27 May 1996, Bev Broomell wrote:
> In the interest of encouraging young people to investigate the
> internet:
>
> ---- Begin Forwarded Message
>
> To: broomell@ix.netcom.com
> Subject: A Sience Project From Massachusetts
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>
> Subject: science fair
> >>
> >>> Hi, our names are Stevie and Amanda. We are in the 5th grade at
> the
> >>> Phillipston Memorial school, Phillipston, Massachusetts, USA. We
> are
> >>> doing a science project on the Internet. We want to see how
> manyresponses
> >>> we can get back in two weeks. (We are only sending out 2 letters).
> Please
> >>> respond and then send this letter to anyone you communicate with on
> the
> >>> Internet.
> >>
> >>> Respond to smc@tiac.net.
>
> >>> 1. Where do you live (state and country)?
> >>> 2. From whom did you get this letter?
> >>>
> >>> Thank you,
> >>> Stevie and Amanda
>