Xref: utzoo talk.politics.soviet:1024 comp.misc:5256 misc.headlines:6773 Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!cornell!batcomputer!zqli From: zqli@batcomputer.tn.cornell.edu (Zhenqin Li) Newsgroups: talk.politics.soviet,comp.misc,misc.headlines Subject: Re: Usenet debate reported on the front page of the New York Times Summary: some explainations (sorry, I'v got to go :-) Message-ID: <7458@batcomputer.tn.cornell.edu> Date: 23 Feb 89 17:42:58 GMT References: <8902231506.AA09584@decwrl.dec.com> Reply-To: zqli@tcgould.tn.cornell.edu (Zhenqin Li) Organization: Cornell Theory Center, Cornell University, Ithaca NY Lines: 252 In article <8902231506.AA09584@decwrl.dec.com> simon@hpstek.dec.com (Curiosier and curiosier...) writes: >>for those who do not subscribe to NYT, and can not find it in a >>library (!), I recommend subscribing to the JBH online mailing list. > >>For non-BITNET people, send email with text: >>SUB ONLINE-L your name > ^^^^^^^^^ >>to: listserv@irishvm.bitnet > >What name should be heer? Just my First-Last (Leo Simon) or my address >(simon@barnum.dec.com) or the whole path from JBH (which I do not know)? >Is the service free or do the subscribers have to pay for it? >The answers will be appreciated. Your full name (Leo Simon). Your path via appropriate gateway will be recorded automatically by the listserv. As I understand, they may still have some problems with the listserv. The JBH news service, like all BITNET mailing lists, is available free of charge, on a VOLUNTARY basis from the provider. So be kind. The following materials had been posted in misc.headlines before, but may still be of interests to some other netters. Please address your questions to the addresses below, since I am not a regular reader of these newsgroups. ==================================================================== Browsing through the BITNET online materials, I found an online news on BITNET which might be of interests to the Usenet netters. The mailing list can be subscribed by using the send/tell commands on BITNET (Appendix 3), or by E-mailing as explained in Appendix 1. As far as myself is concerned, the New York Times daily listing is of interests to me (a sample copy is attached in Appendix 2). There are be some other stuffs which may be considered less/more informative, according to individual tastes. All materials below are appended without permissions nor endorsments. Enjoy. =========================Appendix 1 ======================================== Date: Sat, 04 Feb 89 16:06 EST To: Zhenqin Li From: JBH Online Subject: Re: Add to mailing list Status: R ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- JBH Online (ISSN 0896-8241) Produced from: Online@IrishMVS.BITNET Distributed from: Online-L@IrishVM.BITNET ______________________________________________________________________________ Greetings from JBH Online! Thank you for your subscription request. Your request has been forwarded to the JBH Online distribution point: ListServ@IrishVM Please address any future subscription-related requests to the above address. For a general presentation on ListServ for new users, send the following message to the ListServ address immediately above: Get ListPres Memo For a ListServ command reference card, send the following message to the same ListServ address above: Get ListServ RefCard Thank you for your interest in JBH Online. _____________________________________________________________________________ John B Harlan Post Office Box 693 South Bend, Indiana 46624-0693 United States of America ======================== Appendix 2 ====================================== Date: Sun, 05 Feb 89 12:36 EST To: JBH Online recipients From: NYT Listing from JBH Online Subject: Sun, 5 Feb Status: R ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- &&&&&&&&&&&& Welcome to the NYT Listing from JBH Online &&&&&&&&&&&& Sunday, 5 February 1989 This morning's National Edition of the New York Times includes items on: > "The Changing Face of AIDS," which is gradually becoming more a disease of poor, black and Hispanic heterosexuals than of gay men (the first of a four-part series) (sec. 1, pp. 1 & 16); > Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze's meeting with Deng Xiaoping in Shanghai Saturday (pp. 1 & 8, with photo of Deng and Shevardnadze, sec. 1, p. 1); > Shevardnadze's visit to Islamabad today for consultations with Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto (sec. 1, pp. 1 & 8); > the declining number of black American men in college (sec. 1, pp. 1 & 15); > widespread and socially accepted male prostitution in a small Philippine town (sec. 1, p. 3); > the dwindling interest in reunification with the mainland among the Taiwanese (sec. 1, p. 4); > an appeal by Sri Lankan President Ranasinghe Premadasa for an end to the election campaign violence which has claimed hundreds of casualties in recent weeks (sec. 1, p. 5); > the situation in Paraguay in the aftermath of Friday's coup d'etat against President Alfredo Stroessner (sec. 1, p. 6); > the latest imprisonment of Czech playwright Vaclav Havel (sec. 1, p. 10); > the formation of a unified multiracial anti-apartheid political party in South Africa (sec. 1, p. 12); > the making of Joel Schumacher's new film, "Cousins," starring Isabella Rossellini, Ted Danson and Sean Young (sec. 2, p. 20); > new home video releases, including Philip Kaufman's film of the Milan Kundera novel, "The Unbearable Lightness of Being" (sec. 2, p. 28); > the public television series, "Degrassi Junior High" (sec. 2, pp. 29 & 35); > "Yoko Ono: Objects, Films," an exhibit opening Wednesday and continuing through 16 April at the Whitney Museum of American Art (sec. 2, pp. 31 & 34); > the "box office power" of I.M. Pei's East Building at the National Gallery of Art (sec. 2, pp. 33 & 36); > Voice Navigator, a voice recognition driver device for the Apple Macintosh microcomputer (sec. 3, p. 10); > the Soviets in Afghanistan, 1979-1989 (sec. 4, p. 1); > the independence movement in Estonia (sec. 4, p. 5); > quantum changes in East-West relations in Europe (sec. 4, p. 5; with photo of NATO and Warsaw Pact commanders reviewing maps together before a NATO maneuver); > the twilight of the Botha era in South Africa (an editorial) (sec. 4, p. 24); > the need for change in South Africa (an op-ed piece by Anthony Lewis) (sec. 4, p. 25); > the recent Moscow conference on the Cuban missile crisis (an op-ed piece by conference participant Pierre Salinger) (sec. 4, p. 25); > the availability of the US Department of State's Bureau of Consular Affairs travel advisories by telephone at (202) 647-5225 (sec. 5, p. 1); > Bombay (sec. 5, p. 10); > eight years of fighting in El Salvador (sec. 6 -- The NYT Magazine, pp. 18-21, 53-55, & 57); > the past, present and future of American-Soviet relations (by George Kennan) (sec. 6 -- The NYT Magazine, pp. 32-33, 38, 58, 64 & 66); > sleeping pills (sec. 6 -- The NYT Magazine, pp. 39-40); > a Georgian feast in Tbilisi (with recipes) (sec. 6 -- The NYT Magazine, pp. 41-42; with photo of khachapuri, a Georgian cheese bread); > the spring fashion shows in Paris, Milan, London & Rome (sec. 6 -- The NYT Magazine, pp. 44-46, 48-52); > fruit brandies from the Pacific Northwest, particularly Oregon (sec. 6 -- The NYT Magazine, p. 56); > replicating the fragrances of live, rather than cut, flowers (sec. 6 -- The NYT Magazine, p. 78); > Judy Shelton's new book, "The Coming Soviet Crash: Gorbachev's Desperate Pursuit of Credit in Western Financial Markets" (New York: The Free Press) (a review) (sec. 7 -- The NYT Book Review, pp. 9 & 11); > Ronald Clark's new biography, "Lenin" (New York: Harper & Row) (a review) (sec. 7 -- The NYT Book Review, p. 14); > "The Man Who Saved the Library: An Ode to Vartan Gregorian" (departing president of the New York Public Library, who is assuming the presidency of Brown University) (sec. 7 -- The NYT Book Review, p. 15); > Richard Fenno Jr.'s new book, "The Making of a Senator: Dan Quayle" (Washington: CQ Press) (a review by National Public Radio correspondent Linda Wertheimer, who finds "Mr. Fenno's account of Dan Quayle's growth ... optimistic") (sec. 7 -- The NYT Book Review, p. 19); > Buffie Johnson's new book, "Lady of the Beasts: Ancient Images of the Goddess and Her Sacred Animals" (San Francisco: Harper & Row) (sec. 7 -- The NYT Book Review, p. 22); & > Ronald Bayer's new book, "Private Acts, Social Consequences: AIDS and the Politics of Public Health" (New York: The Free Press) (sec. 7 -- The NYT Book Review, p. 23). News disseminated & views expressed in JBH Online & its supplements (other than Interviews and Letters) are solely the responsibility of John B Harlan, & should not be ascribed to any other individual or institution, including the University of Notre Dame (nodes IrishMVS & IrishVM on BITNET). &&&&&&&&&&& Thank you for reading JBH Online. Good day. &&&&&&&&&&& =================== Appendix 3 (excerpted from listserv.groups) ======== BITNET Network Information Center LISTSERV GROUPS _________________________________________________________________________ EDUCOM PO Box 364, Princeton NJ 08540 609-520-3377 Revised: 01/18/89 LISTSERV@BITNIC BITNET discussion groups, also referred to as LISTSERV lists, are described below. ARPANET SIGs are listed at the bottom of this file. This list is updated monthly; to review newly added or changed groups search for the string ?&. For more information on LISTSERV, see the document called LISTSERV MEMO. To add your name to a list IBM/VM users should send an interactive message as follows: TELL LISTSERV AT nodename SUB listname yourname LISTSERV picks up your userid and node name automatically. For example: TELL LISTSERV AT nodename SUB MAIL-L John Doe VAX/VMS sites running Jnet version 2 can send an interactive message such as: SEND LISTSERV@nodename SUB listname yourname Users with other environments can contact their local user services group for assistance. Users without interactive messaging capability can send "Command jobs" to LISTSERV via RFC822, PROFS, or IBM NOTE formatted mail. To remove your name from any list substitute SIGNOFF for SUB as: SEND LISTSERV@BITNIC SIGNOFF MAIL-L Suggestions for additional lists should be sent to NOETH@BITNIC. To obtain the FRECP11 LISTSERV distribution code contact Eric Thomas, ERIC@CEARN. BITNET Discussion Groups ------------------------ (About 1000 lines deleted. This file can be obtained by typing: TELL LISTSERV AT BITNIC SEND LISTSERV GROUPS on BITNET IBM/VM machines. Users on other machines/networks can try accordingly as I illustrated before.)