--------------- FIDO MESSAGE AREA==> TOPIC: 173 NORML Ref: D5V00001 Date: 05/24/96 From: L P Time: 01:34pm \/To: ALL (Read 1 times) Subj: Norml News 05/23/96 (1) NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR THE REFORM OF MARIJUANA LAWS 1001 CONNECTICUT AVENUE NW SUITE 1010 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20036 T 202-483-5500 * F 202-483-0057 * E-MAIL NATLNORML@AOL.COM Internet http://www.norml.org/ . . . a weekly service for the media on news items related to Marijuana Prohibition. May 23, 1996 Federal Representative Continues Probe Into Potential Misuse Of Federal Power At Anti-NORML Demonstration May 1996, Washington, D.C.: Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) continues to make federal waves in response to a December 1995 rally held outside the offices of Boston radio station WBCN to protest the airplay of the NORML benefit CD, Hempilation. Having previously written to Attorney General Janet Reno this winter both condemning the actions of rally organizers, the Governors Alliance Against Drugs, and requesting an inquiry into whether federal law enforcement officials were involved, Frank is again pressuring the Attorney General to take action. "I'm writing to express my severe disappointment in the response I received [from DEA Administrator Thomas Constantine] to a letter I sent you in December about the conduct of the Drug Enforcement Administration in an effort by officials of the state and federal government to put inappropriate pressure on a radio station, and to do so in an inappropriate manner," Frank asserts. "The response confirmed my fear that the Drug Enforcement Administration does not have the respect for free expression which ought to exist in the federal government, especially the Department of Justice, charged as it is with the protection of constitutional rights." According to eye-witness accounts, the Massachusetts based anti-drug group, in cooperation with representatives from the DEA and local law enforcement, organized and participated in a protest outside the offices of WBCN Boston to voice their disapproval of the station "giving airtime" to the NORML benefit CD, Hempilation. Witnesses note that protesters arrived in state vehicles, attendees were encouraged to "bring their squad cars," and that an individual identified as the Boston liaison to the DEA accompanied Georgette Watson, Executive Director of the G.A.A.D, as she entered the station. This action prompted Bill Downing, president of Mass Cann NORML, to charge that "Th[is] sort of [behavior], when performed by government agents, [is] specifically [prohibited] by law. "It is one thing for government officials to express their opinions as to what is appropriate behavior by radio stations," writes Frank in his follow-up letter to Ms. Reno. "It is quite another for a law enforcement official to arrive in these circumstances and participate in what is clearly an effort to pressure them on the spot. ... We are talking here about a situation where a law enforcement officer - I assume armed with both a weapon and with the power of arrest -- enters a radio station in the company of a state official who has organized a demonstration and joins with her -- indeed at her specific request -- in trying to persuade people at the station to stop playing certain music. "My impression is that we do not have enough law enforcement officials available to do actual law enforcement. Diverting one of them to spend his time seeking to pressure radio stations into changing their selections is it seems to me both a misuse of scarce resources as well as a misuse of the authority of law enforcement officials where people's first amendment rights are involved. I therefore must ask that you promulgate policies which prohibit law enforcement officials from engaging in this sort of activity." For more information, please contact either Bill Downing of Mass/Cann NORML @ (617) 944-2266 or Allen St. Pierre of NORML @ (202) 483-5500. Modified Hemp Measure Becomes Law In Vermont May 14, 1996, Montpelier, VT: A bill (H. 783) that could signal the first step in the establishment of a domestic hemp industry in Vermont became law without the signature of Gov. Howard Dean. However, hemp proponents maintain that the approved measure falls short of the bill's initial expectations and acknowledge that any chance for local industrial hemp cultivation still remains far away. Similar to a resolution recentiy approved in Hawaii, the revised Vermont legislation allows for research to be conducted into the feasibility of industrial hemp production, but removed language that would have authorized the state university to grow test plots in order to assess optimum soils and other growing conditions. The bill is a "compromise," admits Rep. Fred Maslack (R-Poultney), one of the chief backers of the original bill. Maslack notes that Gov. Dean would have vetoed any legislation that allowed for the growing of hemp. "It's a start," stated NORML Deputy Director Allen St. Pierre. "But it's also an indicator of just how far we have to go." In sum, the approved measure maintains that: "The commission of agriculture, food and markets and the University of Vermont are requested to undertake research, of a minimum of two years in --==<<< Continued next message >>>==-- --- RBBSMail/386 v1.0 * Origin: Who's Askin'? Matanuska-Susitna Valley, AK (1:17/75.0) --------------- FIDO MESSAGE AREA==> TOPIC: 173 NORML Ref: D5V00002 Date: 05/24/96 From: L P Time: 01:34pm \/To: ALL (Read 3 times) Subj: Norml News 05/23/96 (2) --==<<< Continued from previous message >>>==-- duration, of industrial hemp production in the state. [This research] shall include: (1) Analysis of market economic conditions affecting the development of an industrial hemp industry in the state of Vermont; (2) Analysis of whether Vermont soils and growing conditions are appropriate for economic levels of industrial hemp production; (3) Analysis of research undertaken elsewhere in the world regarding minimum THC levels of industrial hemp production; and (4) Analysis of possible law enforcement aspects of industrial hemp production in Vermont." For more information, please contact either the Colorado Hemp Initiative Project (CO-HIP) @ (303) 784-5632 or Rep. Fred Maslack @ (802) 287-9298. For more information on state efforts to initiate domestic hemp cultivation, please contact either Allen St. Pierre or Paul Armentano of NORML @ (202) 483-5500. South Australia's Director Of Public Prosecutions Recommends The State Grow Cannabis May 1996, South Australia, Australia: The Director of Public Prosecutions in South Australia wants the State government to grow and regulate the sale of cannabis, according to statements he recently made in an exclusive interview with the Australian publication, The Advertiser. "We never really had a chance [in trying to stop drug use]," Director Paul Rofe, QC, stated. "We've just got to do something drastic." Rofe maintains that criminal involvement in the cannabis trade would be cut dramatically if the government were to either begin growing the drug or issue licenses for its manufacture. Rofe suggested implementing a regulatory system similar to those already in place for the sale of alcohol and tobacco whereby individuals could purchase marijuana over the counter. Such a move would both eliminate illegal profits from the black-market sale of the drug and would cut down on the "underground" attraction of smoking cannabis, Rofe remarked. For more information, please contact James Danenberg of HEMP SA Inc. @ (+61) 8 297 9442 or write: P.O. Box 1019, Kent Town, South Australia, 5071. HEMP SA can be contacted via e-mail @: hempSA@va.com.au or browsed on the World Wide Web @: http://www.hemp.on.net CORRECTION: ACCORDING TO MORE RECENT AND THOROUGH DATA ATTAINED FROM PAUL STANFORD OF THE OREGON STATE POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE, PAY FOR SCHOOLS BY REGULATING CANNABIS, THE OREGON CANNABIS TAX ACT OF 1996 (aka OCTA) HAS ONLY GATHERED APPROXIMATELY 31,000 SIGNATURES -- NOT THE 65,000 THAT WAS REPORTED BY NORML LAST WEEK. NORML REGRETS ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS ERROR MAY HAVE CAUSED. -END- MORE THAN 10 MILLION MARIJUANA ARRESTS SINCE 1965 ... ANOTHER EVERY 65 SECONDS! Reporters and Researchers are welcome at the world's largest on-line library of drug policy material at: http://www.druglibrary.org/ --- Blue Wave/QWK v2.20 * Origin: Who's Askin'? Matanuska-Susitna Valley, AK (1:17/75.0) --------------- FIDO MESSAGE AREA==> TOPIC: 173 NORML Ref: D5W00000 Date: 05/25/96 From: TRAVIS BEARD Time: 08:45pm \/To: ALL (Read 2 times) Subj: Police beaten up by anarchists A crowd of over three hundred drunken youth, wielding baseball bats, beer bottles and other makeshift weapons attacked and beat fourteen Howard County Police Officers who had attempted to issue citations and break up a party the youths were attending. Two officers were hosptialized and witnesses reported seeing officers being dragged out and beaten with baseball bats and sticks. One of the hospitalized officers was treated for contusions in the face and ribs and another received several stitches in his lower lip. Lobbyists from the Utopian Anarchist Party, in testimony at the State House in opposition to the attempt a drinking crackdown maryland is making, warned legislators against sending police against parties of drunken youth, saying that youth would not tolerate such offense. Anarchists have been using house parties to recruit youths and have, on at least two occassion, assigned submachinegun armed guards to defend such events. Police have avoided raiding such parties. One officer commented on these events on the condition of anonymity, stating, "This whole thing [the drinking crackdown] as far as I can tell is a big public relations thing the legislature is trying to do to make it look like they're doing something. Most of these parties, we could send one unarmed officer into and break it up. Stuff like what y'all do -- we're not gonna touch that -- we'd need a SWAT team to do that, and since this is all for show, why send a SWAT team and have big confrontation when we can send a few schmucks in and reap the glory." Anarchist parties in Rockville, Derwood, and Olney, in neighboring Montgomery County, have drawn a cumulative two hundred youth in the past two weekends. U.S.A. NOW RANKING 13th on the on the Human Freedom Index (and Falling) ... Tagline removed to avoid Oklahoma tagline tax. --- Blue Wave/TG v2.12 * Origin: The Blind Pig, Seattle WA (1:343/96.0) --------------- FIDO MESSAGE AREA==> TOPIC: 173 NORML Ref: D5W00001 Date: 05/26/96 From: TRAVIS BEARD Time: 08:12pm \/To: ALL (Read 1 times) Subj: Hentoff on Anti-terrorism bill (habeas c20:12:1605/26/96 Tearing Up the `Great Writ' By Nat Hentoff Two days after Congress passed the much heralded Anti-Terrorism Bill, I was speaking at a benefit for a public library in Charleston, W.Va. The audience was composed of lawyers, doctors, librarians and journalists. They were well informed about local and national politics and health care issues, but most were surprised to be told that the Constitution had just been largely gutted of what Thomas Jefferson called the most fundamental right of all -- habeas corpus. Jefferson had urged James Madison, as the Constitution was being written, to ensure "the eternal and unremitting force of the habeas corpus laws." But with the approval of the president and Bob Dole, the House and Senate have now set such Draconian time limits for federal courts' review of state convictions that -- as Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D-R.I.) said on the House floor -- "This bill increases the risk that innocent persons will be held in prison in violation of the Constitution -- and possibly even executed." Unquestionably, some innocent people will indeed be executed because there is undeniable documentation that eventual habeas reviews have enabled a considerable number of death row prisoners to establish their innocence after much more time than this new law would have allowed them. Some have waited as long as 10 and 12 years. The West Virginians that night, even the lawyers, had not paid much attention to the habeas part of the anti-terrorism debate in Washington. Commercial network news operations and "serious" television discussion shows had, for the most part, been otherwise occupied -- and so were National Public Radio and the Public Broadcasting System. Thomas Jefferson had also said that the only way constitutional democracy would be preserved would be if the citizenry were sufficiently well informed to know what was being done in their name. Only eight senators voted to preserve what for centuries had been called "The Great Writ of Liberty." (Warren Rudman tells me that if he were still in the Senate, there would have been nine.) Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D-N.Y.) -- astonished at the wreckage of the cornerstone of our liberties -- told his colleagues: "If I had to choose between living in a country with habeas corpus but without free elections or a country with free elections but without habeas corpus, I would choose habeas corpus every time. "This is one of the fundamental civil liberties on which every democratic society of the world has built political liberties that have come subsequently." As Moynihan also pointed out, this shameless attempt to capitalize on the Oklahoma City bombing goes beyond drastically cutting down on the time for habeas petitions and on the time for federal courts to decide on them. In addition, this contempt of the Constitution requires a federal court, in habeas matters, to defer to the decisions of state judges on constitutional and other issues -- unless the state court rulings are "unreasonable" applications of the facts or federal laws. That leaves the once-independent federal judiciary very little to review if a state court's being just wrong, but reasonable, on a constitutional issue is of no concern. And just what does "unreasonable" mean? The history of habeas corpus, after all, reveals the often stunning incompetence of many elected state judges when it comes to deciding constitutional issues. Other state jurists -- in unpopular cases -- make their own reelection a priority over due process. Furthermore, as Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor has emphasized, "a state court's incorrect legal determination has never been allowed to stand because it was reasonable." The Congress of the United States is pursuing terrorists by disarming the Constitution. As four former attorneys general -- Benjamin Civiletti, Edward Levi, Nicholas Katzenbach and Elliot Richardson -- wrote in vain to the president: "By stripping federal courts of authority to exercise independent judgment and forcing them to defer to previous judgments made by state courts, this provision runs afoul of the oldest constitutional mission of the federal courts: `The duty to say what the law is.' (Marbury v. Madison, 1803)." Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), one of the key architects of this "anti-terrorism" law, says he wants it to be a "lasting monument to the bombing victims." Instead, he has dishonored them by using their tragedy to weaken the liberty of the living. And habeas corpus is not limited to death row. The writ has released many others who were unjustly imprisoned. But they also don't count in an election year. ... Pump iron with Captain Kirk at the He's Dead Gym! --- Blue Wave/TG v2.12 * Origin: The Blind Pig, Seattle WA (1:343/96.0) --------------- FIDO MESSAGE AREA==> TOPIC: 173 NORML Ref: D5X00000 Date: 05/26/96 From: JAY BERGSTROM Time: 10:41pm \/To: RICH WOODS (Read 1 times) Subj: FROM AN ODD SOURCE... -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- YO_ Rich 05-24-96 04:39 RE: FROM AN ODD SOURCE... Ralph RW> In a message dated 19 May 96 00:21:00, Ralph J Abramo wrote: RJA> * Crossposted from: E-mail RJA> HIGH QUALITY MARIJUANA SEEDS VIA MAILORDER TO THE U.S.! RJA> ------------------------------------------------------- RJA> For ordering information, visit: RJA> http://www.xs4all.nl/~homegrow (Holland) RJA> http://www.aurora.net/hemp (Canada) RJA> http://www.discover.nl/seed (Holland) RJA> Haven't had the chance to check the source of this for myself RJA> (internet access RJA> is VERY limited at the moment... |-/ ) so if anyone gets the chance RJA> to check RJA> these sites, I'd appreciate it if you'd let me know what you find. RW> http://www.euro.net/5thworld/market/market.html Amsterdam Hemp Tour RW> This might prove interesting also. I think this has links to some very RW> nice pictures of Amerterdam's FINEST! RW> Also getting hemp seeds would most likely label you are a RW> "manufacturer". Knowing the gov they probably would say 10 seeds have RW> the potential to cultivate xx acres of land - and thus place you under RW> the death penalty - all the while confiscating your home, cars, bank RW> accounts and literally blackmailing you for all you have in return for RW> a life sentence as opposed to the death penalty. RW> But then "I didn't inhale!" Rich man, You' e soundin so down, so's I'm loading up the big iceberg, the bergy bit, the growler, the large ice bong... and roastin one for ya. This thing will absolutely fuckin' polar ice cap ya. We need to take it to them. The struggle has been in our lap for a couple of rounds here, with Mr. Disappointment in the Oval Office signing the executive order. The Mad Marine governor Pete Wilson here denying by veto medical herb. The denial of meds. Doc! Doc! ya gotta help me! Frightfully Sorry about that old stick, but Pete knows better than you in all things. The veto pen of Pete keeps you in the chains of criminality, suffer you must, for the cleansing of our society. Do you think that they will come in the night, get us from our beds, like little Polly Klass, and put us in prison camps to be rehabbed for our own good, and the good of society? Actually, now in reread, you don't sound down at all, but tuned in. ACT UP-FIGHT BACK! This is not my chant, but one I heard outside Petey's inagural coming from a group of fully roused demonstrators. They ended up later in the day carrying their schtick onto I-80, where there day ended in custody. We need their vigah! We have forgotten how to demonstrate! But, I dunno, the Medical use initiative looks like it will be qualifying for the general election ballot here in CA the Police_State(tm). Mebbe if after a ten year court battle, and then a fifteen year trial of medical use, the possibility of recreational use might be considered by our keepers. If Sam Adams and Ben Franklin were sittin here with me in the kitchen nook, doin' a bong hit, I do believe that they would be amazed indeed that we were committing a crime which could concieveably end up in heinous penalty for all involved. I think that Ben would inhale, but Sam would not. Sam loved to socialize amongst the "mechanics and yeomen" in the taverns of Boston for political support, but not for drink. He thought that with our liberty and our freedom, we should live like old romans. Or so he seemed to say; I think that his wife was a right battleaxe, and that he may have appeased her with some excessive claptrap. The balls of this, the chutzpha, turning a goddamn army general loose on the civilians in name of a War on Some Drugs. RW> ! Origin: I Didn't Inhale-Honest! Origin-White House, Washington DC I'm thinking of a new tattoo on my upper arm, of a big voluptuous bud, and a scroll underneath with the word LIBERTY inside. cheers j -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6 iQCVAwUBMak9bPbKHFVpdQrZAQE0hQP8DR2MjDR9wsbpfk8E1cVUAMx897fVsFNF IXSbT+qkdBc3Ip5876gItgvfJeod1w+l9ohPBNIMIVj+XkkcBc/9fPB9N3lrHk8i vOSAkRlQUnNkWjhQkpwhA0CBuS0S/yCWwH1JhN4uHVq3G04oLszk4avAwZ897a/n TlyMtlGybEE= =2Jdp -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- ~~~ PGPBLUE 3.0 ... DARE: I turned in my parents, and all I got was this lousy T-Shirt! ___ Blue Wave/QWK v2.12 --- FLAME v1.1 * Origin: 24th Street Exchange * A BBS Since 1983 * 916.448.2483 (1:203/52) --------------- FIDO MESSAGE AREA==> TOPIC: 173 NORML Ref: D5X00001 Date: 05/27/96 From: RICH WOODS Time: 3:27Oam \/To: JAY BERGSTROM (Read 1 times) Subj: Re: FROM AN ODD SOURCE... In a message dated 26 May 96 22:41:11, Jay Bergstrom wrote: RW> Also getting hemp seeds would most likely label you are a RW> "manufacturer". Knowing the gov they probably would say 10 seeds have RW> the potential to cultivate xx acres of land - and thus place you under RW> the death penalty - all the while confiscating your home, cars, bank RW> accounts and literally blackmailing you for all you have in return for RW> a life sentence as opposed to the death penalty. RW> But then "I didn't inhale!" JB> Rich man, You' e soundin so down, so's I'm loading up JB> the big iceberg, JB> but tuned in. I am tuned in. Feds are going crazy with confiscation laws. Read a post where an $18,000 van (specially equipped for a lady's handi-capped daughter) was seized after she was caught stealing a $25 sweater. They said the van was the "getaway vehicle" and thus liable to confiscation! JB> If Sam Adams and Ben Franklin were sittin here with me in the WIsh I had a Sam Adams right now - .... --- DLG Pro v1.1u4/PDQMail v2.60 * Origin: I Didn't Inhale-Honest! Origin-White House, Washington DC (1:209/245) --------------- FIDO MESSAGE AREA==> TOPIC: 173 NORML Ref: D5Y00000 Date: 05/28/96 From: GREG MILSTEAD Time: 04:36pm \/To: ERIC CARSON (Read 1 times) Subj: Re: addicting EC> Actually, we had two alcohol poisoning deaths of college students here in EC> Chico within the past year and a half. It *is* more common than you might EC> think. I can't remember the exact number, but it's somewhere around 4,000 per year. In contrast, the number of heroin overdose deaths per year is around 2,000. The number of marijuana overdose/poisoning deaths per year is still zero. :> --- Renegade v5-11 Exp * Origin: Warp Asylum 4o2.462.272o (1:285/83) --------------- FIDO MESSAGE AREA==> TOPIC: 173 NORML Ref: DA100000 Date: 05/29/96 From: R. JAMES IMBERY Time: 3:20 am \/To: HANS ANGSTMANN (Read 2 times) Subj: NORML News Of 25.04.96 You asked for a reply. I hope it does get legallized. Then maybe Canada will soon follow suit. Personaly I think they should legalize the non-addictive stuff for personal use, tax it, and use the $$$ to combat the heavy narcotics. /\ --- DLG Pro v1.1u4/PDQMail v2.60 * Origin: [ X-FACTOR ] (1:134/281) --------------- FIDO MESSAGE AREA==> TOPIC: 173 NORML Ref: DA100001 Date: 05/31/96 From: L P Time: 09:35am \/To: ALL (Read 2 times) Subj: Norml News 05/30/96 (1) WEEKLY NEWS UPDATE >> WEEKLY NEWS UPDATE >> WEEKLY NEWS UPDATE NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR THE REFORM OF MARIJUANA LAWS 1001 CONNECTICUT AVENUE NW SUITE 1010 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20036 T 202-483-5500 o F 202-483-0057 E-MAIL NATLNORML@AOL.COM Internet http://www.norml.org/ . . . a weekly service for the media on news items related to Marijuana Prohibition. May 30, 1996 Marijuana Reform Debate In Full Force In Canadian Federal Government May 1996, Ottawa, Canada: Debate over Canada's federal policies regarding both the widespread cultivation of industrial hemp and the legalization of small amounts of marijuana for recreational use are currently in full swing in the Canadian Senate. Hearings have been ongoing regarding the future of proposed government bill C-8, a measure currently before the Senate that will effectively replace the Narcotic Control Act with the Controlled Substances and Abuse Act. Currently, the measure retains the existing penalties for marijuana: a potential $1,000 fine or six months in jail. However, a growing group of vocal senators from both major parties feel that the time for decriminalization of marijuana has come and the federal law must reflect that. "I am in favor of decriminalizing marijuana," said Liberal Senator Rose-Marie Losier-Cool, one of five senators who sit on the Senate's Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee who have publicly endorsed decriminalization. "We must look at this very seriously. The approach we have now is criminal, it's punitive. Maybe it's a health approach we should be taking a serious look at. The punitive approach has not worked and the problem is still there." "Cannabis is much less lethal than cigarettes and alcohol," added Quebec Progressive Conservative Senator Pierre-Claude Nolin. "Are we into prohibition because it's somewhat of a dogma that we don't question and [because] everybody else is doing it?" "Senators [are] much more interested in a harm reduction model of drug control in this country than they [are] in a punishment model," confirmed Liberal Senator Sharon Carstairs, Chairwoman for the senate committee. "That is where almost all of the senators are coming from." In addition to the growing movement regarding the use of recreational marijuana, support for policies legalizing the widescale growing of industrial hemp is also gathering support. According to a staff-member for Liberal Senator Lorna Milne, the senator will soon be introducing an amendment to C-8 that will make it legal to cultivate hemp by adding "mature hemp stock" to a list of approved substances. The staffer reports that Milne's office does not anticipate "any difficulty" regarding the passage of the amendment and adds that the proposal has the support of Health Minister David Dingwall. "[Hemp cultivation] seems to me to be a sensible thing to do," Milne said recently. Bill C-8 is currently undergoing it's second committee review in the Senate and the overall bill is expected to be amended and returned to the House of Commons. Sources who have spoken to NORML anticipate that any measures regarding hemp cultivation should pass both the Senate and House without complications, but warn that proposals regarding the decriminalization of recreational marijuana will most likely be opposed by the House. To find out more about the Senate Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs or to read the transcripts from testimony given to the Senate Committee, please browse the following website: http://www.parl.gc.ca/english/senate/com-e/lega-e.htm. For additional information regarding the status of bill C-8, please contact Dana Larsen of Cannabis Canada @ (800) 330-HEMP or via the Internet @: http://www.hempbc.com/. Senator Lorna Milne's office may be reached @ (613) 947-7695. Black Motorists Subject To Stops And Searches On I-95 More Often Than Whites May 1996, Perryville, MD: Black motorists are stopped and searched for drugs at least four times more often than whites by a special Maryland highway drug unit that patrols stretches of Interstate 95, according to a recent report from the Associated Press. Although state police spokesmen have flatly denied using racial profiles, findings from an AP computer analysis of car searches indicate that more than 75 percent of all drivers whose cars were searched by the special drug squad through the first nine months of 1995 were black. In all, the Special Traffic Interdiction Force (STIF), whose six officers are white, searched 145 of the motorists it stopped along a 50 mile stretch of I-95 between the Delaware border and the Baltimore County line; of these, 110 motorists were listed as black, 24 white, six Hispanic, and five "other" minorities. Maryland --==<<< Continued next message >>>==-- --- RBBSMail/386 v1.0 * Origin: Who's Askin'? Matanuska-Susitna Valley, AK (1:17/75.0)