Linux-Misc Digest #422, Volume #19 Fri, 12 Mar 99 06:13:08 EST
Contents:
Re: Ghostscript vs Canon BJ10e (Mark Tranchant)
Re: swapon -s: /proc/swaps: No such file or directory (Mark Tranchant)
Mwave For Linux Project
Help: No man in Debian 2.1? ("Bill")
Re: Red Hat questions (Michael Proto)
Re: Real Audio ? (Jeremy Nickolet)
[question] dcc for linux (Jean-Yves Simon)
HELP: IBM Printer Question ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
minor glitch in StarOffice 5.0? ("Miguel B. Martinez")
Re: "/usr is busy" error message on shutdown (Gregory G. Woodbury)
Cool Edit for Linux!?! ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Re: Netscape on Linux -- Bookmark bug? ("Gero H. Marten")
Re: Disk Boot Failure!! After Install (Clifford)
Re: Kernel 2.2.2 Intel ("Richard Latimer")
Re: Making a bootdisk for rescue purposes (Igor Zlatkovic)
Re: sed: splitting word over several lines (Wlmet)
Gnome 1.0 and RH5.1 ("Christoffer Sørensen")
Re: 2.2 Sound code ("Anthony Grace")
Re: Newbie, URGENT QUESTIONS (Wlmet)
Re: /etc/rc.d/init.d problems (Gregory G. Woodbury)
Re: VNC: server on LInux, viewer on NT - GREY screen problem (Jon Sundquist)
Re: hacked login (telnet) (Gregory G. Woodbury)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Mark Tranchant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Ghostscript vs Canon BJ10e
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 08:07:29 +0000
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Ooops. magicfilter is what I meant.
180dpi should work - it's the "defaults" of 300 and 600 (for HP LJ
printers) that may cause problems.
Mark
Matthew Palmer wrote:
>
> [Cc: mail and news]
>
> On Thu, 11 Mar 1999 08:24:57 +0000, Mark Tranchant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >I have a BJ-10sx working nicely in native mode with Ghostscript using
> >the inbuilt BJ-10e driver. No magic on the command line, I'm afraid. Try
> >looking at one of the "universal" lpd interfaces like magicprinter,
> >perhaps...
>
> Nyeh? I thought that lpr was the "universal" lpd interface? Are you
> thinking of a magicfilter, which automatically detects the type input to lpd
> and formats it accordingly? If so, I'm planning on putting one of those in,
> but I need a working ghostscript first.
>
> >Remember to set the resolution to 360. Have you tried printing a known
>
> The resolution is probably the problem, then. It's currently set to 180 - I
> didn't think it would cause huge problems, just make it come out larger or
> something.
>
> >good PS file, like <gs>/examples/tiger.ps?
>
> I don't think I've tried tiger.ps, but I have tried printing a PS file which
> worked with the epson driver and a different printer.
>
> --
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------
> Matthew Palmer | GE/CS d- s+:+ a--- C++(+++)>$ UL+++ P+ L++ !E
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] | W-- N++ o? K- w--(---) O- M-(--) V? PS+ PE Y+
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] | PGP+ t X+ R+ tv+ b+++ D++ Ge>++++ h* r++ !y+
------------------------------
From: Mark Tranchant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: swapon -s: /proc/swaps: No such file or directory
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 08:03:39 +0000
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
/proc/swaps is a useful file when you have more than one swap device.
For example, I have an 8MB uncached-RAM swap device (
http://www.andrew.cmu.edu/~keryan ) and a 70MB swap partition. I clearly
want the RAM swap used first, as it is much faster, so I assigned it a
higher priority in /etc/fstab. I can then use /proc/swaps to check that
this is indeed working.
Having done that, I have no further need for the file until something
seems to go wrong, when it could be useful for diagnosis.
Mark.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> On 7 Mar 1999 21:39:05 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Dieter Rohlfing) wrote:
>
> >On Sat, 06 Mar 1999 21:11:45 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Juergen
> >Heinzl) wrote:
> >
> >>In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Dieter Rohlfing wrote:
> >>>I have the proc filesystem installed, but no entry /proc/swaps. Where is
> >>>the switch to get /proc/swaps? TIA.
> >>
> >>man swapon
> >
> >Man swapon doesn't tell me, how I can get /proc/swaps. Did you read man
> >swapon?
> >
> >Dieter Rohlfing
> what do you need /proc/swaps for?
> free
> gives swap space info
> if you are looking to creat swap space, your looking in the wrong
> place
> man mkswap
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 09:05:01 +0000
From: <Use-Author-Address-Header@[127.1]>
Subject: Mwave For Linux Project
Crossposted-To:
comp.os.linux.hardware,comp.os.linux.portable,uk.comp.os.linux,ibm.ibmpc.thinkpad
Hi,
Have you got an IBM Thinkpad or Aptiva with an
Mwave Soundcard and want to run Linux?
Maybe you would like to contribute to the native
Mwave driver project?
The Mwave Project for Linux has the answers.
http://www.flexion.org/mwave/
* Native Mwave driver project - NEW!
[HELP REQUIRED]
* Forum for Mwave/Linux Users - NEW!
* How to enable Sound Blaster Pro 3.1
Emulation under Linux
* Updated for 2.0.x and 2.2.x kernels.
* Improved layout and easy to follow.
* No Windows 3.x/95 or 98 required.
We look forward to your visit!
--
L8r,
__ __
/ \ / \ __ ___ ___ ____ __ __
\ \/\/ // /'__ `__ \/ __ \/ / / /
\ // / / / / / / /_/ / /_/ /
\__/\ //_/_/ /_/ /_/ .___/\__, /
\[EMAIL PROTECTED]/_/ /____/
------------------------------
From: "Bill" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Help: No man in Debian 2.1?
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 00:06:22 -0800
When I type man in Debian 2.1 I get something like bash:man no such command.
This is very disappointing because I'd hoped to learn from these pages. I'm
a total newcomer. I've looked in books and FAQ's but they keep telling me
to use man, which I can't.
I'd appreciate any help from anyone. I'm starting to think they left man
out of this new version or are playing a joke on new users or something?
Thanks.
------------------------------
From: Michael Proto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Red Hat questions
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 08:42:45 +0000
Karl Bengtsson wrote:
>
> I managed to figure out the last bunch of problems, but now I've got some
> other things I need to know:
>
> 1) I cannot run netscape (gold v3.04) as root, and I don't know why. As a
> normal user, a menu called "Applications" is added under X, where a new
> Netscape entry is added. I can also run it from the shell within X.
> However, when I'm root, that menu doesn't appear, and I can't even run it
> from the shell. I just get a bash error saying command wasn't found or
> something like that. Same thing goes for Doom (the game). Does anyone know
> why?
The mesage is saying exactly what it means, it cannot find the
application in the current directory or path. You might want to do a
"find / -name netscape" to locate where Netscape is installed, and then
you can run it from the command line. Say the find command found
netscape in the /usr/bin/netscape folder. Then you would type
"/usr/bin/netscape/netscape" to run the command in an xterm window. If
you want it to run in the background (so you can still use the xterm
window for other commands while Netscape is open), type
"/usr/bin/netscape/netscape &". To fix your menu files, you will have to
edit the appropriate rc file for your window manager.
> 2) The RedHat Network Configurator, which is what I use to connect to the
> net, is appearently a python script. I have no idea what that means, except
> I can only access it as root. Someone mentioned pppd, which I have read
> about in the howtos. But it seems kinda complicated to do all that just to
> access the net. Isn't there any way to make the Network Configurator
> accessible to all users?
I run RedHat 5.1, but I uninstalled that nasty Linux Configuration menu,
so I can't help you there. I use a pppd script, and I run it as root.
> 3) Is there an easy way to figure out Linux commands? If I know what I want
> to do, but don't know the command to do it? The man pages aren't much help
> then. It took me a couple of hours just to figure out how to "ps" and
> "kill" a program....
My suggestion is to get a book for some good offline reading. I'd
suggest "Running Linux" (ISBN 1-56592-151-8). I started with it, and its
great for learning some of the basic fundamentals on Linux. You also
might want to check out some of the docs at
http://metalab.unc.edu/LDP/index.html if you don't want to shell out
money for a book.
> Thanks for all the help I've gotten! It's great that there are so many nice
> people out there willing to lend a hand to beginner.
>
> /Karl
--
-] Michael Proto [-
-] MCP: Win95 [-
-] Happy Linux user since 1997 [-
ERROR: REALITY.SYS Corrupted! Reboot universe? (Y/n)
------------------------------
From: Jeremy Nickolet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Real Audio ?
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 09:29:40 GMT
root wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Does anyone know whwere I might be able to get Real Audio or
> a similar program that will allow me to listen to all my favourite
> sites??
>
> The G2 costs like $150 bucks, I want GNU !!!!
>
> Anyways, thanks in advance and have a nice session.
>
> Warren
You can get a free Real Audio Player 5.0 from Real Networks. I'm not
aware of any gnu projects that are working on a clone. Real Networks is
working on a G2 player for Linux, but 5.0 is working great for me.
Jeremy
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jean-Yves Simon)
Subject: [question] dcc for linux
Date: 12 Mar 1999 09:24:54 GMT
Hi,
in windows 95, one can have a "poor man network" by connecting
2 computers using parallel port with a little utility called
dcc.
Is there such a thing in Linux ?
Thanks in advance.
--
Jean-Yves SIMON E-mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: HELP: IBM Printer Question
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 05:07:42 GMT
I just got a refurbished IBM 4029-030 printer which was billed to
have Postscript & PCL5 capabilities. From using the front pannel.
I can see PPDS emulation mode.... but no PLC5 or Postscript. Unfortunately,
when I print postscript to it, the stuff gets printed out raw!
Can anyone tell me how to verify PCL5/Postscript is available on
the printer...?
If you've already solved the problem PLEASE enlighten me!!!
Thanks,
Derek
============= Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ============
http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own
------------------------------
From: "Miguel B. Martinez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: minor glitch in StarOffice 5.0?
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 02:09:53 -0600
Hello Folks
I hope somebody can help me.
I seem to be having a problem with StarOffice 5.0
I can start the program and run it just fine until I open another
program over top of the SO window or drag the window of another open
program across the top of SO. At this point SO just locks up. I
usually end up having to kill the process to get it off my screen. I
never had this problem with SO 4.0. Granted I can deal with it by not
messing with other software while I'm using SO5.0 (Dr, Dr it hurts when
I do this! Response: Then don't do that.) This really shouldn't be an
issue in a multitasking system though, should it?
If you have any Ideas, Let Me Know, PLEASE
later
mig
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Gregory G. Woodbury)
Subject: Re: "/usr is busy" error message on shutdown
Date: 12 Mar 1999 09:40:13 GMT
Mark Tranchant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> shaped electrons to say:
>Have you upgraded anything? Specifically, have you installed glibc-2.1
>according to the instructions?
>
>These instructions tell you to move your old libc5 libraries to a new
>directory on /usr. Unfortunately, the old libc5 umount command that runs
>on shutdown requires access to it during unmounting of /usr, which holds
>the libraries open and marks the partition as busy...
>
>I moved my libc.so.5 back to /lib with no apparent problems and the
>problem went away.
>
>Mark.
AH HA!
I knew there had to be something that would elegantly explain the
problem. The "remount" solution still is a valid method, and avoids
the problems that *might* be caused if some silly program is looking
for the libc.so.5 library in /usr/lib.
--
Gregory G. "Wolfe" Woodbury `-_-' Owner/Admin: wolves.durham.nc.us
ggw at wolves.durham.nc.us U Errant co-moderator of:
soc.religion.unitarian-univ
"The Line Eater is a boojum snark." Hug your wolf. (Thanks Peter.)
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: rec.audio.pro
Subject: Cool Edit for Linux!?!
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 09:41:12 GMT
I asked Syntrillium if they're planning to port Cool Edit Pro to
Linux, and this is the reply I got:
>Hello,
>
>We do not currently have any products available for Linux. We're looking seriously
>at the prospects for Linux and may launch Linux versions of our products within the
>next year or two.
>
>Best Regards,
>
>--Ryan Foster
> Syntrillium Software Technical Support
Good news, uh?
frank
------------------------------
From: "Gero H. Marten" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Netscape on Linux -- Bookmark bug?
Date: Thu, 11 Mar 1999 18:55:04 +0100
Benjamin Sher wrote:
> I am very curious to know whether the AUTOMATIC name sorting function (Edit
> Bookmarks, View, Name) works in Linux. It does NOT work in Netscape 4.x or
> Communicator 4.5 and has not worked in Netscape since Netscape 3.04, when
> it worked just fine. This, in my opinion, cripples Netscape's bookmarks.
> Who enjoys organizing thousands of bookmarks by name MANUALLY? Even IE can
> do that. I still can't believe that Netscape has not fixed this bug in
> nearly two years, and I and others have written to them many times
> concerning this. Has anyone in Linux noticed it and, if so, since Netscape
> is open source, has any Linux hacker managed to fixed it? Would it be easy
> to fix it?
No sorting under Linux possible.
--
Gero H. Marten
<http://www.provi.de/gmarten/index.html>
--
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Clifford)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup,linux.redhat.misc
Subject: Re: Disk Boot Failure!! After Install
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 09:52:01 GMT
Me thinks you have a point there so off i rushed home to give this a
whirl. However there was no option on fdisk (Linux - neither does disk
druid by the way) to set the active partition (as opposed to MS-DOS
which has the option) but i believe it has to be there but just not so
obvious. So where do i set the active partition - DOS fdisk or
GNU/Linux Fdisk (to be proper).
Cliff
On Thu, 11 Mar 1999 02:06:23 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Doug Hall) wrote:
>
>Your boot partition is not set to be the active partition. Start up
>Linux with your boot floppy, run fdisk, and make the boot partition
>active.
>
>Doug
>
Which is more important :
The Country or it's populace?
------------------------------
From: "Richard Latimer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Kernel 2.2.2 Intel
Date: Thu, 11 Mar 1999 23:21:23 -0800
>} You have an older version of pcmcia. Either upgrade or find the pcmcia
>} package script that is setting /dev/modem to /dev/cua3 and change it.
>
>I just downloaded the latest pcmcia package a couple week ago 3.0.8 or
>something like that. I also have the recommended rpms from RedHat for
>2.2. I'll just have to poke around through the scripts some more.
I think what you are looking for is /etc/rc.d/pcmcia which starts or
stops the pcmcia package. The version you have is not aware of the
2.2.2 kernel changes. The newer version, probably 3.0.9, is aware and
will create the proper link to /dev/modem, but you can just change the
line in the old pcmcia script.
richard
------------------------------
From: Igor Zlatkovic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Making a bootdisk for rescue purposes
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 10:15:09 +0000
Well, I actually used /sbin/mkbootdisk script for making the boot disk. The
script is made by Red Hat and can be found on any Red Hat installation (This
is slightly modified RH 5.2). I cannot imagine that the script doesn´t work.
In fact, at the installation time, it did make a functional boot disk with
the supplied kernel (2.0.36).
Running the same script on a 2.2.2 kernel produces results I described. There
is only one solution to this: I did something wrong with the kernel config.
And that makes me think that every other boot-disk-making tool will fail for
the same reason.
FAT is another problem. I never really used DOS, so there is nothing to send
in for a refund :-)
The boot disk should be ext2fs with lilo, and the ramdisk image is another
floppy. FAT is not very much loved here. I could live with NTFS, but to make
a NTFS boot floppy for this purposes is not really apropriate. Ext2fs is the
only thing that remains.
Anyway, I will check debian site for this and thank you for the answer.
Igor
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Wlmet)
Subject: Re: sed: splitting word over several lines
Date: 12 Mar 1999 05:39:28 GMT
>I am attempting to use a sed command sequence to replace each '/' character
>with the newline character so that each date component is placed on a
>seperate line.
OK this will work:
$ sed 's:/:\
>:g' datafile
At least it worked for me.
------------------------------
From: "Christoffer Sørensen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: be.comp.os.linux,alt.uu.com.os.questions
Subject: Gnome 1.0 and RH5.1
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 11:00:39 +0100
I have installede Gnome 1.0 on my rh5.1 system and I have some problems:
1. I have tried to replace xdm with gdm, but gdm says:
"can't find user (gdm). Aborting". In /usr/etc/gdm/gdm.conf it says
user=gdm.
should this be so???
2. My panel is missing the running apps (I can't see which apps are
running; I have seen on screenshots that running apps should in the
panel)
3. Apps are disappearing all the time. Ex: i start the menu editor,
click on applications and the menu editor disappears.
4. I keep finding core all over my harddisk (size 2 MB).
5. Applications load really slow (slower than win98)
Could you mail some answers (if you have any), as I don't check the
usenet all the time.
Thanks...
Christoffer Soerensen, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
------------------------------
From: "Anthony Grace" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: 2.2 Sound code
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 18:18:16 +0800
Might be card specific I have tried 2 types of SoundBlaster cards with no
problems
Anthony Grace
Kotze & Cougar (The tongue kissing hairy ones, Malamutes to heathens)
Ewan Dunbar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
...
>I've recently tried 2.2.2 and found the sound code awful. I'm going back
>to 2.0.36 for the time being. It freezes the whole system when it
>tries to load after a warm boot. Has anyone else noticed this?
>
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------
>Eastman: He came out of the east to do battle with The Amazing RANDO!
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------
>Ewan Dunbar
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>http://earl.thedunbars.com/pmah/index.html
>---------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Wlmet)
Subject: Re: Newbie, URGENT QUESTIONS
Date: 12 Mar 1999 05:41:48 GMT
>
>1) change my resolution to 800x600 from 600x480
control alt +
should change resolutions. If this doesn't work, please advise as this is a
tricky subject.
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Gregory G. Woodbury)
Subject: Re: /etc/rc.d/init.d problems
Date: 12 Mar 1999 10:20:01 GMT
Scott Kester <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> shaped electrons to say:
>not find the new entry K10dbora. Is that possible? If I read the docs
>correctly it should read the directory every time it runs. Is there a
>file I have to update to get the shutdown process to take another look
>at the contents of the rc0.d or rc6.d directories? Any help would be
>great.
I just re-read the /etc/rc.d/rc script, which runs the items in the
subdirectories in order. There are some complicated tests to try and
ensure that the script exists and is qualified to be run.
The only surprise to me was that it insists on seeing a lock file for
the "subsystem" (i.e. system daemon) in the "run lock" directories
(/var/lock/subsys/<subsysname>) before it will kill the subsystem.
The <subsysname> is gotten by removing the "Knn" bit from the front of
the scripts. In your case it wants to see a file named
/var/lock/subsys/dbora
existing before it will run the Kill script. The startup will work
because the subsystem test is reversed so that it will only run if
there isn't a lock. Since the rc.sysinit script removes the contents of
the /var/lock/subsys directory while preparing to run the rc script,
the startup scripts "can't" fail at boot time.
This is a rather arcane bit of init script writing requirements, and
I've overlooked it several times. It also explains why some of my
"subsystem" daemons don't get shutdown properly!
Add creating and removing the "/var/lock/subsys/dbora" file with a
simple touch (zero length file) and "/bin/rm -f" line in the start and
stop portions of the script.
[I'm gonna mail this to myself at work too -- self-lart administered]
--
Gregory G. "Wolfe" Woodbury `-_-' Owner/Admin: wolves.durham.nc.us
ggw at wolves.durham.nc.us U Errant co-moderator of:
soc.religion.unitarian-univ
"The Line Eater is a boojum snark." Hug your wolf. (Thanks Peter.)
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 00:40:57 +0000
From: Jon Sundquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking,comp.os.linux
Subject: Re: VNC: server on LInux, viewer on NT - GREY screen problem
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> I have the VNC server on Linux. The VNC viewer on NT.
> I can connect with the
> viewer, but all that I see is a grey screen with the X
> cursor (similar to
> that seen on Linux after 'startx' but before your
> chosen window manager kicks
> in). Although I can move the
> cursor, there is nothing there to select!!
> Anyone know what I'm not doing that I should be?
I had a similar problem, but I am not at the box where I had VNC
running, so I don't know if I can give a complete answer. If I recall
correctly, it was because there was no route in the routing table to the
IP adddress that the windows box was seeing my linux box as. My
situation was linux <-> via TCP/IP over a serial cable. I was
frustrated since I could run a PC X server on the windows box just fine,
remotely running apps from the linux box. But VNC would give me the
grey screen. It turned out that although I had a loopback route to
localhost (127.0.0.1, as does everybody), I had to add a separate route
in the routing table to the "internal" IP address I had assigned to the
linux box (e.g. 192.168.0.2) as part of the TCP-over-serial connection.
Unlike running a remote X server, where you are displaying the remote
apps on a server on the remote box, VNC works by actually running the
"remote X server" on the "home box". Thus, unless you have a route to
that IP address (i.e. the IP address of the linux box, as seen by the
windows box) in the routing table, you can't send apps there to be
displayed.
Or else it is becuase you have no apps starting up in your startup file,
as someone else suggested.
Hope this helps.
Jon Sundquist
------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Gregory G. Woodbury)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.admin,comp.os.linux.networking,linux.admin.isp
Subject: Re: hacked login (telnet)
Date: 12 Mar 1999 10:32:54 GMT
Colin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> shaped electrons to say:
>
>Contents of hosts.deny
>ALL:ALL
>
>Contents of hosts.allow
>in.telnetd: allowableip, allowableip, allowableip
>
>or you can just put your entire subnet in the allow file
>instead of individual ip addresses.
Also, be sure that the inetd.conf line looks like:
telnet stream tcp nowait root /usr/sbin/tcpd in.telnetd
The "/usr/sbin/tcpd" is the most important, it lets the tcp-wrappers
security tools read and honor the hosts.deny/hosts.allow files.
The man page for the hosts.allow and deny files is hosts_access(5),
which is read by the command "man 5 hosts_access"
[Now really Colin, there is no need to say a "luser drooled".
Its really disrespecful and insulting. LART yourself ]
--
Gregory G. "Wolfe" Woodbury `-_-' Owner/Admin: wolves.durham.nc.us
ggw at wolves.durham.nc.us U Errant co-moderator of:
soc.religion.unitarian-univ
"The Line Eater is a boojum snark." Hug your wolf. (Thanks Peter.)
------------------------------
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End of Linux-Misc Digest
******************************