Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!usc!brutus.cs.uiuc.edu!psuvax1!psuvm!cunyvm!cwugc From: CWUGC@CUNYVM Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.rt Subject: A question about 6152 running ACIS/4.3 Message-ID: <90033.203844CWUGC@CUNYVM.BITNET> Date: 3 Feb 90 01:38:44 GMT Organization: City University of New York/ University Computer Center Lines: 78 Hi everybody, A friend of mine has got hold of a core disk (600M+) and was able to successfully format it on a model/60 with a RISC card. Now having done that wants to be able to use it to run 4.3 off an RT. Now my question is, Can he do that ? If so he want to have a maximum utilization of the disk. I wish to solicit input from everybody on the net on the pro's and cons on doing this. Also I want to know about any hurdles if possible Thanks in advance C Wu Relay-Version: Version 1.7 PSU-NETNEWS 5/20/88; site MAINE.BITNET Posting-Version: Version 1.7 PSU-NETNEWS 5/20/88; site MAINE.BITNET Path: cunyvm!maine.bitnet!greenman From: John Greenman Newsgroups: soc.culture.china Subject: PRISONER OF CONSCIENCE: TIAN QING Message-ID: Date: Friday, 2 Feb 1990 22:01:04 EST RECEIVED FROM NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO IN REGARDS TO THEIR CONTINUING SERIES OF "AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL REPORTS": PRISONER OF CONSCIENCE: TIAN QING TIAN QING, deputy director of the Research Institute of Music at the Chinese Academy of Arts in Beijing, has been held incommunicado in a Chinese jail for four months because he gave an eyewitness account of the crackdown on the pro-democracy movement. Tian Qing reportedly saw the tanks move against the unarmed students and civ ilians. He left Beijing on June 4 and later that evening, reported on what he s aw before an audience at the Shanghai Music Conservatory. Reports are that Tian Qing was subsequently denounced to police by informers who listened to, or heard about, his speech that day. He was arrested on September 23, 1989 and has apparently been held at a police station in the west of Beijing. Conditions in police detention centers are generally reported as being worse than in larger jail facilities. no formal charges have been filed against Tian Qing, and family members have not been allowed visitation rights. Tian Qing has been described to Amnesty International as a dedicated pacifist and a Buddhist. A distinguished music historian, he has been actively involved in the Chinese Musicians Association and the Buddhist Music Society in Beijing and Hong Kong. He was well known at Shanghai Music Conservatory as a lecturer on music and other topics. The detention of the noted musicologist is considered by Amnesty International to be a violation of the basic right of peaceful free speech, and he is considered a prisoner of conscience. RECOMMENDED ACTION: AIR MAIL A LETTER TO (please copy exactly): HE JINGZHI DAILI BIZHANG WENHUABU DONGSI BEIJINGSI PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA (NOTE: HE JINGZHI IS THE ACTING MINISTER OF CULTURE) suggested salutation: Your excellency write a brief letter in which you... -express concern about the whereabouts of Tian Qing; -say that he is reported to have been arrested for peacefully expressing his right of freedom of speech; -urge his unconditional and immediate release since he has reportedly been held without charge for over three months -you may mention Amnesty International in your letter. PLEASE SEND YOUR LETTER PROMPTLY! Remember that Amnesty international opposes human rights violations wherever they occur, but not government or political systems. Letters SHOULD NOT BE ACCUSATORY. It is better to assume that the authorities are, in fact, willing to seek a remedy for violations of human rights if they are properly informed. Be courteous and concise. Anyone wanting more information about Amnesty International Reports on radio can call Sarah Spitz at KCRW radio (213-450-5183) The program is offered free to all National Public Radio stations. Unfortunately, FAR from all bother to take it! -John Greenman