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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TigerPaw who wrote (201981)9/14/2004 12:12:58 PM
From: i-node  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572970
 
>> The Times New Roman is an obvious choice.

Nonsense. While TNR has been around for years (and was originally designed for use by the Times (of London)), it was not common in office environments until Microsoft popularized it with Windows 3.1.

TNR was used in book printing prior to Windows. It was AVAILBLE for office use, but was practically nonexistent.



To: TigerPaw who wrote (201981)9/14/2004 12:58:18 PM
From: Yousef  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572970
 
Tiger,

Re: "Show me a memo in WingDings and you might have a point."

Here's more Bush documents -->

Rather, the Sequel

"HEADLINE: CBS Stands By Claim of Bush National Guard Payoff

DATELINE: WASHINGTON

BODY:

Faced with the second major controversy this month about its reporting on
President Bush's National Guard service, CBS News on Friday defended its report
that President Bush had used $3 bills to bribe Texas Air National Guard officials in 1973.

The latest dispute erupted after the CBS News program "60 Minutes II" reported
earlier this week that Bush had used several thousand $3 bills to buy the silence
of National Guard officials who were questioning whether he had met his service
obligations. The program featured color photocopies of some of the currency
allegedly used to pay the bribes.

Conservative critics on the Internet immediately cried foul, claiming that there
was no such thing as a $3 bill, and some news organizations later quoted "experts"
as expressing doubt that such a denomination ever existed.

Claims were also made that the bills were "doctored" versions of recent $5 bills.
Some of the bills, while containing 3's in each corner, bear the text "FIVE DOLLARS."
The bills contain portraits of former President William Jefferson Clinton that
appear roughly one centimeter left of center on the face of the bills.

The right-wing critics contend that the Treasury Department did not begin printing
currency with left-of-center portraits until the mid-1990s. They also argue that
Clinton's portrait would not have appeared on currency in 1973, 20 years before
he became president.

The critics also assert that the copies of the bills were produced by color
imaging and printing methods that weren't available three decades ago.

CBS has declined to say where the bills came from, but has said they came from "solid sources."

On Friday's "CBS Evening News," anchor Dan Rather said that "no definitive
evidence" had emerged to prove the currency was not authentic.

"As with the earlier memos, if any definitive evidence comes up, we will report it," Rather said.

The show broadcast an excerpt of an interview with Terry McAuliffe, a currency
expert, who said that the $3 bills were genuine. In Friday night's report,
McAuliffe said, "I've handled a lot of cash in my life, and I can't say that
I've never seen a $3 bill. These bills look real to me. But if they aren't real,
then I'm sure Karl Rove had something to do with them."

The CBS report stated "with absolute certainty" that the disputed currency
could have been produced by the government in the early 1970s.

According to CBS, its sources in the United States Bureau of Engraving and
Printing had confirmed that the government had the capability of producing $3 bills
in 1973. Rather said that "Treasury officials acknowledge that the government was
able to print a '3' just as easily as it could print a '1', '2', or a '5.'"

Independent experts consulted by the Amalgamated Press appear to share this view.
A leading practitioner of numerology said that "the number '3', like the other Arabic
numerals, has been around a long time." According to the numerologist, who requested
anonymity, the number '3' dates back to at least the 6th century AD, and perhaps
earlier. "There's no question the United States government was aware of the number
before 1973 and easily could have put it on legal tender," she said.

The CBS program also pointed out that several of the documents found in Bush's official
National Guard files used the number '3'. The number appears, for example, in the
date "1973," the year some of the documents were created.

"These documents demonstrate conclusively that the number '3' was available for
use by the government in the early 70s," said CBS's Rather, who reported both the
Friday segment and the earlier "60 Minutes II" piece.

Noting that Clinton was born in 1946, CBS's consulting experts also stated that it was
entirely possible that the future president could have posed for a portrait before 1973.

Nevertheless, the network's right-wing critics continued to deny the possibility that
the $3 bills were real.

One blogger's online post exclaimed: "It's RIDICULOUS that we're even DISCUSSING the
possibility of a $3 bill. Haven't you ever heard of the phrase "queer as a $3 bill"?
It only makes sense because there is NO SUCH THING as a $3 bill!!!"

Responding to this claim, a CBS spokesman said, "The credibility of our news organization
should not be called into question by the homophobic rants of people in pajamas."

Reached by telephone late last night, the blogger declined to comment on whether he was
wearing pajamas."


Make It So,
Yousef



To: TigerPaw who wrote (201981)9/14/2004 5:41:05 PM
From: combjelly  Respond to of 1572970
 
"Show me a memo in WingDings and you might have a point."

Yousef? Have a point? Surely you jest...