Date:  Friday, 28 September 1984 14:58 mst
From:  James J. Lippard <Lippard>
Subject:  Miscellaneous Digest V3 #30
Reply-To:  {mbx >udd>Multics>Lippard>misc>misc}
To:  {list >udd>Multics>Lippard>misc>misc}

Miscellaneous Digest                              Volume 3 : Issue 30

Today's topics:
                    Onyx BC8820 Stone Block Reader
                    primes
                    another glitch in the call
                    cat food
                    super heroes

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date:  Thursday, 27 September 1984 23:24 mst
From:  Jay Pattin <Pattin at MIT-MULTICS>
Subject:  Onyx BC8820 Stone Block Reader
Forum-Transaction:
          [1620] in the >lib>forum>forum_dir>Bulletin_board
          meeting
Transaction-Entered-By:  SIPB_Daemon.SIPB@MIT-MULTICS.ARPA
Transaction-Entered-Date:  27 Sep 84 21:36 EDT
Redistributed-Date:  28 September 1984 11:08 mst
Redistributed-From:  Pattin
Redistributed-To:  {mbx >udd>m>jjl>misc>misc}

Date:  Thursday, 27 September 1984 16:05 edt
From:  Walter Hamscher <walter at MIT-HTVAX>
Subject:  Onyx BC8820 Stone Block Reader

Professor Petra Hechtman of the Archaeology Dept has an Egyptian
tombstone written in Hieroglyphs on an Onyx C8002 system running
ONYX IV.II that he needs to read.  The Onyx system that the
block was written with has died (legend has it that it is archived
in the temple of Tymsharin).  He needs to get the data off the
rock soon so that the exact date of Graduate Student Lunches can
be calculated (the most recent prediction fixes the date of the
next "bologna eclipse" as Friday the 28th at noon in the Third Floor
Playroom, hosted by David "Saz" Saslov and Mike "Mpw" Wellman).
According to Data Gene-rock, the original Filer was 1/4 cubit,
6250 spd (strokes per digit), 90 RAs, up to 10K BC.  Anyone who has,
knows of, or has chips off the original device that might be
able to decipher the stone, please contact Prof. Hechtman at
x5848, or at /dev/null@mit-htvax.

------------------------------

Date:  Friday, 28 September 1984 08:44 mst
From:  Ron Barstad <RBarstad>
Subject:  misc digest

Mathematician's proof that all odd numbers are prime:
  "3 is a prime, 5 is a prime, 7 is a prime; therefore, by INDUCTION,
  all odd numbers are prime."

Physicist's proof:
  "3 is a prime, 5 is a prime, 7 is a prime,... uhh, experimental error ...
   11 is a prime, 13 is a prime, ...."

Electrical Engineer's proof:
  "3 is a prime, 5 is a prime, 7 is a prime, 9 is a prime, 11 is a prime..."

Computer Scientist's proof:
  "3 is a prime, 5 is a prime, 7 is a prime,
                               7 is a prime,
                               7 is a prime,
                               7 is a prime,
                               7 is a prime, ..."
Multician's proof:
  "3 is a prime, 5 is a prime, 7 is a prime. There are no standards or
   resources allocated to find the remaining primes."

------------------------------

Date:  Wednesday, 26 September 1984 08:09 mst
From:  J. Noel Chiappa <JNC at MIT-MC>
Subject:  Found on a 5th floor blackboard

          Another Glitch in the Call

We don't need no indirection,
We don't need no flow control,
No data typing or declarations;
Did you leave those lists alone?

HEY! HACKER!
Leave those lists alone!

All in all, it's just a pure LISP function call.


          Sung to the tune of:
          'Another Brick in the Wall', Pink Floyd.



------------------------------

Date:  Thursday, 27 September 1984 12:28 mst
From:  Edjik <G.EGK at SU-SCORE>
Subject:  [the tty of Geoffrey S. Goodfellow <Geoff@SRI-CSL.ARPA>: Cat
          Food.]

Return-Path: <@SRI-CSL:GEOFF@SRI-CSL.ARPA>
Received: from SRI-CSL.ARPA by SU-SCORE.ARPA with TCP; Wed 26 Sep 84 10:25:48-PDT
Date: 26 Sep 1984 10:18-PDT
Sender: GEOFF@SRI-CSL
Subject: Cat Food.
From: the tty of Geoffrey S. Goodfellow <Geoff@SRI-CSL.ARPA>
To: DB-Lovers:
Message-ID: <[SRI-CSL]26-Sep-84 10:18:29.GEOFF>


S.F. Sunday Examiner & Chronicle

                     BOY AND HIS PET PYTHON GIVE
                      NEW MEANING TO `CAT FOOD'

LA GRANDE, Ore. (UPI) -- A 15-year-old boy who scanned newspaper ads
for free kittens to feed his pet python "doesn't look at it as being
cruel," his mother says.

"He looks at it as just feeding his pet snake," said Pam Lewis, whose
son, Tim Barricklow, is the target of complaints.

"We don't feel like we're killing pets," Lewis said of the 9-foot-long
and growing snake, whose appetite is moving beyond the kittens stage.
"We're keeping one alive."

The boy responded to several newspaper classified ads offering free
kittens  earlier this summer.  He picked up kittens in La Grande,
Island City and Cove, Ore.  He also said he received three alley cats
from a La Grande pet store, two of which were fed to the snake.

The third was returned to the store because the snake refused to eat
it, he said.

"To me, it's no more inhumane than the Humane Society gassing them,"
his mother said.

Nevertheless, Lewis said, Barricklow stopped feeding kittens to the
snake, named Apache, because the python continues to grow and needs
bigger meals.

Several complaints against the boy have been filed with the Oregon
State Police, the La Grande Police Department and the Humane Society.

Barricknow insisted that the diet is part of the natural food cycle
and said using the animals as food is not as bad as making snakeskin
purses and boots.

He said the snake was underfed when he got it about a year ago.  He
began feeding it a constant diet of mice and rats, and as it returned
to good health its appetite increased until he was feeding it 16 rats
a week.

Once the 25-pound reptile reaches full growth of about 20 feet, it
will demand larger animals such as pigs or baby goats, he said.
-------
-------


------------------------------

Date:  Tuesday, 25 September 1984 16:08 mst
From:  Jef Poskanzer <Poskanzer.PA at XEROX>
Subject:  It's getting harder to be super.

[from Technology Review, February/March 1981, page 87]


    Superheroes from throughout the galaxy recently met in Metropolis
for the First Joint Conference of Superheroes.  This important event was
staged in an effort to give new direction to the ailing superhero
business: superheroes are falling by the wayside because of advances in
technology.  Conference chairperson Green Lantern summed up the problem
in his opening address: "The fact is," he remarked, "it's getting harder
to be a superhero."

    Superman gave substance to some of the problems addressed at the
conference.  "Leaping tall buildings at a single bound is one thing when
the building is only 20 stories tall.  But modern skyscrapers - some
over 100 stories high - are causing me serious concern about future job
security.  Why, with the speed of some modern elevators, even old Perry
White can get to the top of some buildings as fast as I can.  Recently,
I had to take four bounds to reach the top of the Sears tower in
Chicago."

    Superman continued, "And as for being faster than a speeding bullet,
the new generation of military rifles, including the M-16 and the AK-47,
already gives me a close race.  I wouldn't be surprised if, in five
years, I just won't be able to compete."

    The overwhelming concerns of the other superheroes echoed Superman's
worries about forthcoming obsolescence.  The Flash, for example,
proposed that the conferees form a joint committee to look into pension
options for superheroes forced out of work.  This was adopted by the
conference, and the Flash was named as chairsuperhero.  Also on the
pension committee are Bruce Wayne of the dynamic duo, Batman and Robin.
Wayne favors adoption of a plan similar to Social Security in which
earnings of all superheroes are taxed to form a general fund.

    Aquaman, whose ability to talk to fish is not yet in technological
jeopardy and whose skills are increasingly in demand as offshore
drilling, shipping, fishing, and ocean-mining activities increase, had
sharp words against such a plan.  "If Batman and Robin don't have the
skills to remain competitive in the superhero business, they should get
out.  They can always get work as a comedy act, like Jerry Mahoney and
Knucklehead Smith.  If the free market doesn't require their services,
then they should find another market - not leech an existence from those
who have remained competitive in changing times.  Why should I subsidize
people who offer nothing in return?  Sure, Superman, Flash, and some of
the others want a free ride.  But I have my own row to hoe.  Let them
take care of themselves."

    Scientist Bruce Banner, whose research efforts led to the
development of his superstrength alter ego, the Hulk, had a different
view.  "A pension plan is treating the symptoms and not the causes," he
said.  "What we need is a concerted research effort to keep up with
developing technology.  Aquaman feels confident about his future now,
but it won't be long before he is in the same boat as the others."

    Banner proposed a two-pronged research effort.  One branch would
look into advanced applications for super-talents already possessed.
For instance, Superman could use his x-ray vision to evaluate stresses
in bridges, dams, and buildings.

    A second and even more important research area is the development of
new superpowers.  "As my own work has proven," he said, "superpowers can
be developed scientifically.  We must strive for innovations that will
keep us ahead of new developments in crime.  For example, with the
upsurge in electronic bank robberies, there is a serious need for
someone to oversee data-processing operations around the world.
'Chipman' or 'Chipwoman' could monitor electronic pulses in the world's
communications networks to lead them to the culprits.  And 'Memoryman'
or 'Memorywoman' could preclude the consequences of common computer
failures that erase memory banks.  The ramifications of these data loses
are both costly and, when involving defense or crime-fighting files,
dangerous."

    Banner's comments were met both with interest and skepticism.
Remarked fellow scientist Braniac 5, "While the superheroes generally
possess above-average intelligence, many are still skeptical of pursuing
scientific solutions.  They tend to see science as their enemy - the
force that is creating their obsolescence.  It is therefore hard for
them to support research."

    But Banner's proposal did garner enough interest that Lantern also
created a committee to investigate the feasibility or research-oriented
solutions.  And although a date has not been finalized, the conferees
agreed to meet again this winter in Gotham City to review the reports of
the two special committees.

    The conference ended on a humerous note with an annoying appearance
by the imp from the fifth dimension, Mr. Mxyzptlk.  However, John Jones,
Martian Man Hunter, was able to induce the imp to say his name
backwards, thus sending him back to his own dimension.

    -- Jeff Stollman


------------------------------

End of Miscellaneous Digest
***************************
