R a N d O m A c C e S s H u M o R RAH! RAH! Volume 0 Number 9 June 1993 A rag-tag collection of fugitive humor, some of which is vaguely related to the BBS/Online System world. Editor: Dave Bealer Member of the Digital Publishing Association Copyright 1993 Dave Bealer, All Rights Reserved Random Access Humor is an irregular production of: VaporWare Communications 32768 Infinite Loop Sillycon Valley, CA. 80486-DX2 USA, Earth, Sol System, Milky Way WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! The "look and feel" of Random Access Humor has been specifically earmarked, spindled and polygraphed. Anyone who attempts to copy this look and feel without express written consent of the publisher will be fed to rabid radioactive hamsters by our Security Director, Vinnie "The Knife" Calamari. TABLE OF INCONTINENCE: About Vaporware Communications.....................................01 Editorial - Pizza and Circuses.....................................01 Lettuce to the Editor..............................................02 Lord of the Pies...................................................02 The Gremlin's Apprentice...........................................04 When the Cat's Away................................................06 DaffyNitions (H-L).................................................08 The Eyes Have Had It...............................................09 The Twit Filter: Network Purists...................................09 RAH Humor Review: Splitting Heirs..................................10 Tennis Balls Seen Around the Nets..................................11 Masthead - Submission Information.................................A-1 RAH Distribution System...........................................A-2 Random Access Humor Page 1 June 1993 About Vaporware Communications VaporWare Communications is an operating division of VaporWare Corporation, a public corporation. Stock Ticker Symbol: SUKR VaporWare Corporate Officers: Luther Lecks President, Chief Egomaniac Officer Dorian Debacle, M.B.A. Gabriel Escargot V.P., Operations V.P., Customer Service Pav Bhaji, M.Tax.(Avoidance) Carlos Goebbels V.P., Finance V.P., Political Correctness Kung Pao Har Hoo, M.D., Ph.D., D.Sc. F.A.C.S, C.P.A., S.P.C.A., Y.M.C.A., L.E.D., Q.E.D., op. cit., et al. V.P., Research & Development --------------------------------------------------------------------- Editorial - Pizza and Circuses by Dave Bealer This has turned into a strange RAH issue (a redundancy?) again. This bit of prose replaces the previously written editorial, which was promoted to an actual article, "The Eyes Have Had It." May was a stressful month for yours truly, with several instances of day work required; yuck! I usually work nights (and Greg is the vampire?), so my sleep cycle was totally scrambled. I managed to churn out a few articles despite the problems. A few jokes may even have crept into one or two of them. This issue suddenly has two articles dealing with late night activities in computer centers. Ray Koziel submitted his in early May. It was formatted, spell-checked, then set aside until needed. Greg Borek submitted his article four days after deadline, which is typical. Greg's article seemed vaguely familiar. I thought we might have published a similar article in a recent issue. Only when I began laying out this beast did I realize that the familiar sounding article was slated for the same issue! Oh...what the heck? Why not make this a theme issue? So this is now the "Late Night Pizza Party in the Computer Center" issue of RAH. RAH Does Internet RAH is now available directly to users on the Internet via anonymous FTP. site: uglymouse.css.itd.umich.edu directory: pub/Zines/RAH The files are named: rahYYMM.txt. This is an uncompressed ASCII text version. Issues since May 1993 are available. I have no direct control over when the new issue is posted for download at this site. Each new issue will be sent to the archivist on the last day of the previous month. Please be patient. {RAH} Random Access Humor Page 2 June 1993 >>>> Lettuce to the Editor <<<< We only received one letter this month, by a reader from the wilds of coastal British Columbia. Said reader only has access to issues 0 through 3 of RAH Volume 0 due to the vagaries of communications in that part of the world. It was also apparent from the missive that spelling checkers are a luxury unknown in those parts. The crux of the letter was a request for a diskette filled with more recent RAH issues. Although this request could not be honored as such, we are making every effort to find new ways to distribute RAH. A new service is now being offered by Vaporware Communications: dial 1-900-555-TWIT and hear James Earl Jones reading the text of the latest RAH issue. This call costs just $4.95 per minute, average call is 18 minutes. Kids, distract your parents' attention away from the phone before calling. Seriously speaking, there are plans in the works for a "Best of RAH" annual hypertext edition for MS-DOS. The first one should be available in September 1993, concurrent with the first anniversary issue of RAH. The annual will not be freeware, but a commercial product. Price has yet to be determined, but will probably fall into the $10 - $9999 range. {RAH} --------------------------------------------------------------------- Lord of the Pies by Dave Bealer Throughout recorded history certain people, places and things have had strange, almost mystical relationships with other people, places and things. Joined forever in legend, song and deed, these pairings have become inseparable: King Arthur and the Holy Grail; Babe Ruth and the home run; Lizzie Borden and her axe; lemmings and the sea; computer programmers and pizza. Anyone who has spent time in a computer center can confirm the last relationship. Pizza is the preferred fuel for all night coding and debugging sessions. Even the U.S. Commerce Department has noted the unusually high number of pizza delivery businesses within 5 miles of every computer center. In some small college towns, pizza delivery now accounts for as much as 71% of all off-campus revenue. Certain cynics have noted that many of these computer centers are located on college campuses and that the whole campus, not just the computer center, is responsible for the abnormally high pizza delivery statistics. These cynics have neglected two factors which confirm the Commerce Department figures. The first is the presence of parking spaces marked for the exclusive use of pizza delivery drivers right next to the handicapped and campus police spaces in front of the computer center. Of course, pizza delivery vehicles are now recognized as emergency vehicles in 38 states. This new status simply confirms the way they drove all along. Random Access Humor Page 3 June 1993 The second factor is the four lane highway being constructed between pizza delivery row and the computer center on many of these campuses. Non-essential campus buildings, like the English and Mathematics departments, have been torn down to make room for these critical thoroughfares. The most telling fact is that all pizza delivery drivers working within range of any computer center do not need directions or a specific address to find the place. Just order "the usual" for the night shift at XYZ Corporation Computer Center; thirty minutes or less later a large Greek Pizza with double anchovies will appear in the terminal room. Not that computer centers are all that popular with pizza delivery drivers. Programmers are notoriously bad tippers. Even most well paid professionals tip like they were still impoverished college students. Getting the pies delivered usually turns out to be the easiest part of pizza acquisition for any group of two or more programmers. Nasty arguments are sure to break out before the order is even placed over such crucial elements as toppings and how many pies of what size to order. Vegetarian programmers are an annoyingly large and quite vocal minority who cause no end of frustration for their carnivorous brethren. The Alpha-Vegans are the pickiest eaters of all; they insist that the pizza crust be made only from grain that voluntarily threw itself on the special ceremonial scythe. Toppings are not the only bone of contention for pizza ordering mobs of programmers. There are now many varieties of pizza available. There is white pizza without tomato sauce, red pizza with tomato sauce, green pizza with guacamole sauce, and purple pizza with grape soda sauce. Then there is the matter of crust thickness. Pizza crust now comes in all sizes from whisper thin phyllo dough crust to super industrial strength foot-thick crust, which can double as a mattress or life raft. The final decision to be made before any pizza order can be placed is where the order will be placed. Pizza brand loyalty is quite strong for many programmers. Said loyalty can approach cult status with certain folks. The Dominosians battle the Little Ceasarians, who battle the Pizza Hutterians. Then there are the favorite locally owned places, like the omnipresent Luigi's: home of the "Impersonal Pan Pizza." Many of these contests take the form of "stick to the ceiling" cheesiness tests. These conflicts waste a great of deal of pizza and are not popular with the computer center custodial staff, who never get any pizza out of the deal, save what they can scrape off the ceiling. The real combat begins when the pizza finally arrives and it's time to decide who pays for it. The pizza is usually stone cold by the time the finances are settled. Microwave ovens are becoming standard equipment at most computer centers. (continued) --------------------------------------------------------------------- Sound Byte: Common Sense is not Politically Correct. Random Access Humor Page 4 June 1993 The one puzzle still facing researchers delving into the matter of pizza and programmers is the "mystery of the final slice." Many pizza eating groups will fight tooth and nail over the final slice, whereas other groups will leave the final slice for the vultures. This last behavior pattern took the experts completely by surprise. Granted, the final slice is often a sad, undersized specimen, usually bereft of toppings, or occasionally even cheese itself. But it still counts as one of the basic food groups for programmers, along with just about anything that can be obtained from a vending machine at three in the morning. Pizza behavior scientists at the laboratories of Industrial Smoke and Mirrors have applied for $25 million in grants from the government to expand mankind's knowledge in this crucial field. {RAH} -------------- Dave Bealer is a thirty-something mainframe systems programmer who works with CICS, MVS and all manner of nasty acronyms at one of the largest heavy metal shops on the East Coast. He shares a waterfront townhome in Pasadena, MD. with two cats who annoy him endlessly as he writes and electronically publishes RAH. FidoNet> 1:261/1129 Internet: dbealer@access.digex.net --------------------------------------------------------------------- The Gremlin's Apprentice by Greg Borek It was late one dark and stormy night when I stopped back at work on my way home. As I rounded the corner into the cluster of cubicles where my desk is, I was frozen in my tracks by the sound of a thin, high voice from a one foot high blue creature yelling: "Spoofle? Where are you boy?" "Right here, sir." "Well, stay where I can see you. Little gremlins aren't supposed to hide from their elders." "Yes, sir. Can we set something on fire now?" "No, Spoofle, gremlins never do anything so obvious. I can see we have a lot of work to do if I'm ever going to get you past Gremlin Apprentice." "But sir, I thought we were supposed to break things, cause trouble, create bugs,... you know, be annoying. How about low-level formatting a few hard disks?" "That's exactly what I mean. The humans would know if you did something like that. How about just cross linking some of the files? Did you ever think of that? The humans think 'that just happens.' And what ever happened to being annoying without destroying anything? How about just loosening a screw here and there so some of the hard disks produce that oh-so-nice high pitched whine? Some apprentice you are. I bet you didn't even change the intensity on any of the monitors here, did you?" Random Access Humor Page 5 June 1993 "No, sir. Hmm. I guess we shouldn't just delete files outright, huh?" "Now you're catching on. Undelete some old versions of files over top of the newer ones. Let me ask you, what percent of the documents printed on the network printer will should be lost?" "Uh, 5%, sir?" "Spoofle, I certainly can't fault your enthusiasm, but we are trying for subtlety here. 5% is a bit high. A document loss rate of 1.5% to 3% is much more acceptable. At 5% users might send for a repairman. Less than that they just wait a while, complain to someone, curse networks everywhere then go print it again. Remember, Spoofle, we don't want to be too obvious here or the users will suspect; if we wanted to be obvious we would simply set the building on fire." "Sorry, sir. What about corrupting a library that 3 programmers share so they will be sure to blame each other? Hey! How about fixing the bug in a different library where you put it last week?" "Now you're catching on. It's always good to make programmers doubt the fundamental concepts underlying their tools every so often. Keeps them mildly confused. While you're changing files, try changing some file attributes to make some files unavailable without actually destroying them. How about making some of the keys on the older keyboards stick, while making other keys repeat." "Yeah, yeah, how about adding a dozen lines to a source code module that no one has edited for weeks, without changing the modification date, of course. This will cause an error from somewhere they do not expect, but only the next time they recompile everything." "What about changing the executables already completed and about to be shipped? They should contain bugs that cannot be duplicated here." "Yes, sir. Say, why did we every give up sabotaging airplanes anyway?" "The defense industry caught on to us. They got tough. Do you know how much it costs for the parts for a B-2 bomber? $29.45. The other billion is to make the plane gremlin-proof." "Really? Is that all?" Random Access Humor Page 6 June 1993 "Well, that and we never really figured out how to get through those pesky security things you have to run a card through. Anyway, computers are easy to screw up. People are naturally afraid of them for some reason, and that plays right into our hands. They think these machines are capable of capricious decisions, and as long as they go on believing that, we will always have a job." I had had enough. I turned on the lights and they scattered. I called a 24 hour security place that installed those pesky security things that you have to run a card through. Productivity went up 150% in the next quarter alone. {RAH} -------------- Greg Borek is a C programmer with a "Highway Helper" (OK, "Beltway Bandit" - but don't tell his boss we told you) in Falls Church, VA. He has previously been mistaken for a vampire. Netmail to: Greg Borek at 1:261/1129. Internet: greg.borek@f1129.n261.z1.fidonet.org --------------------------------------------------------------------- When The Cat's Away... by Ray Koziel I have always wondered what goes on back at the office once everybody has gone home and the lights go out. So, I came up with a nifty little device (patent still pending) that hooks into our network. The network is token ring and has six PCs on it. There is also a connection available to one of the mainframes. The following is what my monitor picked up. For simplicity the PCs have been named George, Bob, Wendy, Mike, Jim, and Sue. The mainframe has been named Fred. Mike: Hey everybody...I think the coast is clear! George: Phew! What a day! I never thought my user would be done running those reports. I have one hell of a CPU-ache! Wendy: I know what you mean. Sometimes I believe those humans don't understand what we have to put up with - power surges, disk crashes, I/O errors... Jim: Hey! Why's everybody so gloomy! Come on! Let's play a game... George: Easy for you to be so cheerful! Your user loads you with video games and hardly works all day! You better hope his boss doesn't find out and fire him, then you may get stuck with some nerd that pushes you to the limit like mine does! Jim: Well excuse me! Mike: Alright you guys, let's hold it down... Fred: Hey...what's going on down there?? Sue: Oh, good going guys...you woke up the old timer. Random Access Humor Page 7 June 1993 Fred: Old timer! Who are you young whipper snappers calling an old timer? Why in my day we ran batch processes that ran for hours and had to sift through hundreds of lines of COBOL code. And we liked it! Bob: In your day...in your day. Your day is gone! Jim: That's right! We're phasing you old piles of silicon out! Wendy: Hey guys, be nice! Bob: Well it's true! My user complains everyday about how long some of his jobs run and says he can't wait until they're converted to C++ so I can run them. Now there's power! Arg! Arg! Arg! Sue: Come on you guys, he can't help it he's old and not as efficient as us. Jim: "He can't help he's not as efficient as us!" Phooey! Hey...anybody check out that new 486 on the 5th floor! Yowza! Would I like to share a file with her! Wendy: Is that all you think about? You're lucky you haven't caught a virus yet! Jim: Hey, my user watches out for me. Besides, why don't you mind your own business, you little... Mike: I think we've all heard enough from you. Promise to behave and I'll let you have the token again. Jim: Alright, alright...I get the picture. Geesh! Make someone the server and they get all high and mighty! Wendy: Hold it! I think I hear someone... George: Your right...it's my user! Dang it, he's come in early to do some extra work! Argh!! Why me! Mike: Well guys, time to put on the ol' act again. Bob: Yep - just a bunch of mindless computers that only do what we're told. Oh well, it's a living. {RAH} ================= Ray Koziel is a systems programmer (C++ and Pascal) for Blue Cross Blue Shield of IL's EMC-Net, a private bulletin board used for electronic submission of insurance claims. Living in Chicago with a wife, a new baby boy and two dogs, Ray has found RAH helpful in keeping his insanity. FidoNet: 1:115/542 (The Loonatic Fringe BBS) Random Access Humor Page 8 June 1993 DaffyNition Taglines (H-L) compiled by Rob Nykvist (Theodore, AL.) Hangnail: Coat hook... Harpist: A plucky musician... Hex dump: Where witches put used curses... High Colonic: Jewish religious holiday... Ignorance: When you don't know something and someone finds out... Impotent: Distinguished; well known... Incest: The theory of relativity... Irony: Millie Vanilli on a Karaoke machine... Junk: Something you need the day after you throw it away... King James: A biblical hacker... (Off with their heads...) Kissing: Putting your honey where your mouth is... Knapsack: A sleeping bag... Labor Pain: Getting hurt at work... Lawyers: n... The larval stage of politicians... Lefties: The only people in their right minds... Liberal: Too poor to be a capitalist, too rich to be a Communist... Life: A terminal, sexually transmitted disease... Light year: A regular year with less calories... Lizzy Borden: The original hacker... Logic: The art of being wrong with confidence... LORD: Let Oral Roberts Die... Love of Money: The root of all EVIL... LSD: Virtual reality without the expensive hardware... {RAH} --------------------------------------------------------------------- Sound Byte: Q: Why don't the British build computers? A: Because they can't figure out how to make them leak oil! Random Access Humor Page 9 June 1993 The Eyes Have Had It by Dave Bealer "Don't sit so close to the television! You'll ruin your eyes!" Familiar words from childhood for members of the first true "TV Generation." If only mother knew what we were in for once we grew up. Now those of us in the "information professions" spend all our days staring at modified TV screens that are typically less than 2 feet from our faces. Increasing numbers of employers are admitting the effects that extended CRT usage has on the eyes of their workers. Low radiation CRTs, screen filters and free eyeglass plans are the common reactions of corporations to this problem. Many of us don't get enough of this abuse at work, so we plant ourselves in front of PC monitors for hours once we get home. The full color Super VGA monitors we use are getting larger all the time. The mega-monitors of the future will require humans working within the hazard zone to wear modified welding masks to protect their eyesight. Of course the hazard zone will extend from the front of the monitor out approximately 4.8 kilometers. I recently used my rapidly failing eyesight to read the final book in the popular series by John Updike, _Rabbit tastes good_. {RAH} --------------------------------------------------------------------- The Twit Filter: Network Purists by Dave Bealer Millions of people communicate through amateur e-mail networks every day. As many as 9000 people make their first call to a BBS each day. Eager to get the most out of their new toy, these users are happy to explore any board, any network they can find. The same cannot be said for many old timers. There are veteran users out there who are content with the network they have been using for years. They have no interest in the newer networks. There is certainly nothing wrong with this. The problem stems from certain veterans who take things one step further. These "network purists" believe that not only is the network they have been using for years the best, they believe that anyone who belongs to an "other" network is inferior, or even non-existent. The most common form of network purist is the FidoNet Purist (Fidoneticus Ludicrus). This species believes that FidoNet, the world's oldest and largest amateur e-mail network is still the only amateur e-mail network. Their belief is that anyone who is not in FidoNet is not online. This species would rather write 75 messages in a FidoNet echo complaining that someone who they need to contact online is not in the nodelist, rather than make one 5 minute local phone call to logon a board where the person in question can be reached. Random Access Humor Page 10 June 1993 In extreme cases where it is important to the purist's interests to actually contact the other person, the Fido purist will offer to "set the unbeliever up with a mailer." This offer is rarely accepted, since most FidoNet technology mailers appear to have been designed by the Spanish Inquisition. The best way to deal with network purists is to place them in your twit filter. Don't worry, these characters won't bother you for long. As technology advances, these pitiful specimens will be left clinging to their ancient packet formats, flaming each other to their hearts' content. They deserve each other. {RAH} --------------------------------------------------------------------- RAH Humor Review: Splitting Heirs by Dave Bealer Since nothing new and funny presented itself online this month, I had planned to review the new comedy movie "Splitting Heirs," starring Eric Idle, John Cleese and Rick Moranis. Greg Borek and I saw it early in May and enjoyed it. The problem occurred when I tried to find an advertisement for the movie in the 05/23/93 edition of the _Baltimore Sun_ (a newspaper) in order to obtain information for the review such as the name of the studio that released the flick. Not only couldn't I find an ad, but I couldn't even find a listing for the movie in ANY theatre in the Baltimore area! It boggles my mind that this movie could have left the first run theatres that quickly. "Splitting Heirs" (SH) is not as good as some of the Python alumni's earlier efforts, like "A Fish Called Wanda." It is no slouch as a funny movie, however, and deserves better than this. While I'm no fan of Rick Moranis, I actually enjoyed his work in SH. Eric Idle was his comically affable self, while John Cleese had a hilarious turn as a homicidal lawyer. It may be too late to see SH in the theatre, but it will be well worth renting when it comes out on video. {RAH} --------------------------------------------------------------------- Reminder: RAH seeks to review the funniest things online each month. A wide range of items/services can be reviewed. Send us copies of any funny electronic books or magazines you publish. Let us know about any funny BBSs or Online systems you find or operate. We'll even take a look at humorous conferences, although we don't need to see any more conferences that consist entirely of old, tired Blonde jokes, or the many other standard joke lists that circulate constantly in the online world. Contact Dave Bealer at: FidoNet- 1:261/1129 Internet- dbealer@access.digex.net --------------------------------------------------------------------- Random Access Humor Page 11 June 1993 --- Taglines Seen Around the Nets What if there were no hypothetical situations? Never, EVER trust a draft dodger.... Well, isn't that S P E C I A L! Could it be.......... S A T A N ? A crate of UZI's, a carton of whiskey...lets go to Disneyland! Cream rises to the top......but then, so does scum... To be or not to be, those are the parameters. The crisis of today is the joke of tomorrow. Time is natures way of keeping everything from happening at once. Kiss me twice, we're schizophrenic. There are no facts, only interpretations. Men are most apt to believe what they least understand. Logic is neither an art or a science but a dodge. What may be, may not be. AAAAAA - American Association Against Acronym Abuse Anonymous Seems just like yesterday . . . Hey! It was! If you can't beat your computer at chess, try kickboxing. Do ROFLS have ridges? Just don't let Kirk show you what he calls "The Captain's Log." A fate worse than death: to be married alive. Few problems cannot be solved by proper application of high explosives. "Is that seat saved?" "No, but we're praying for it." The weather is here, wish you were beautiful. CPE1704TKS "The only winning move is not to play." - Joshua I am Zsa Zsa of Borg. Prepare to be assimilated dahling. Been there, done that, bought the T-shirt. Random Access Humor Page 12 June 1993 We must believe in free will. We have no choice. It's mind over matter - it you don't mind, it don't matter. If J. Paul Getty opened a health resort, would it be a Spa-Getty? Sits he on ever so high a throne, a man still sits on his bottom. Finish your mail packet! Children are offline in India. If I buy the steel wool, can you knit me a Porsche? To iterate is human; to recurse, divine. (bits of ice striking hull) "Captain, we're being hailed." Diarrhea is hereditary; it runs in your genes. Inconceivable! - Vizzini Barney is a velociraptor. Take time to smell the roses and eventually you'll inhale a bee. I think I'd kill for a Nobel Peace Prize. Please hold, a representative will annoy you shortly. Hell hath no fury like the lawyer of a woman scorned. Do you like me for my brain or my baud? If at first you don't succeed, call it version 1.0 Millihelen: amount of beauty required to launch one ship. One good turn gets all the blankets. Never violate the Prime Directory! C:\ 'Cause I'm a Borg, yea, yea, yea. Alright, who's been cooking hot dogs in the warp nacelles? Blonde Klingons: because it was a good day to dye. This starship brakes for black holes. And Adam asked, "What's a headache?" If I put water in my dog's mouth, will bells ring? Wicked Witch Parking Only - Violators will be toad. They mean to win Wimbledon! Random Access Humor Page A-1 June 1993 Random Access Humor Masthead: Editor & Publisher: Dave Bealer Contributing Editor: Greg Borek Contact: The Puffin's Nest BBS FidoNet: 1:261/1129 BBS: (410) 437-3463 (1200-14400/V.32bis) Internet: dbealer@access.digex.net greg.borek@f1129.n261.z1.fidonet.org Regular Mail: (Only if you have no other way to reach us!) Random Access Humor c/o Dave Bealer P.O. Box 595 Pasadena, MD. 21122 USA Random Access Humor (RAH) is published monthly by Dave Bealer as a disservice to the online community. Although the publisher's BBS may be a part of one or more networks at any time, RAH is not affiliated with any BBS network or online service. RAH is a compilation of individual articles contributed by their authors. The contribution of articles to this compilation does not diminish the rights of the authors. The opinions expressed in RAH are those of the authors and are not necessarily those of the publisher. Random Access Humor is Copyright 1993 Dave Bealer. All Rights Reserved. Duplication and/or distribution is permitted for non- commercial purposes only. RAH may not be distributed on diskette, CD-ROM or in hardcopy form for a fee without express written permission from the publisher. For any other use, contact the publisher. RAH may only be distributed in unaltered form. Online systems whose users cannot access the original binary archive file may offer it for viewing or download in text format, provided the original text is not modified. Readers may produce hard copies of RAH or backup copies on diskette for their own personal use only. RAH may not be distributed in combination with any other publication or product. Many of the brands and products mentioned in RAH are trademarks of their respective owners. Copies of the current issue of RAH may be obtained by manual download or Wazoo/EMSI File Request from The Puffin's Nest BBS (FREQ: RAH), or from various sites in several BBS networks. Back issues of RAH may be obtained by download or file request from The Puffin's Nest BBS. Internet users may obtain RAH issues via anonymous FTP from : uglymouse.css.itd.umich.edu Directory: pub/Zines/RAH Article contributions to RAH are always welcome. All submissions must be made electronically. File attach your article to a netmail message to Dave Bealer at 1:261/1129. E-mail may also be sent via Internet to: dbealer@access.digex.net Random Access Humor Page A-2 June 1993 Tagline and filler submissions may be made via e-mail. Article submissions should be made via file. Submitted files must be plain ASCII text files in normal MS-DOS file format: artname.RAH; where artname is a descriptive file name and RAH is the mandatory extension. Your text should be less than 70 columns across for widest readability. If your article does not conform to these simple specs, it may get lost or trashed. Also note that such imaginative names as RAH.RAH might get overlaid by the blatherings of similarly minded contributors. If your hardware is incapable of producing file names in the proper format, you may send your article as one or more e-mail messages. It will not be possible to make private responses to any submissions or correspondence received. The editors reserve the right to publish or not to publish any submission as/when they see fit. The editors also reserve the right to "edit", or modify any submission prior to publication. This last right will rarely be used, typically only to correct spelling or grammar misteaks that are not funny. RAH is a PG rated publication, so keep it (mostly) clean. RAH can accept only the following types of material for publication: 1) Any material in the public domain. 2) Material for which you own the copyright. If you wrote it yourself, you are automatically the copyright holder. 3) Authorized agents for a copyright holder (typically an organization) may submit material on behalf of that holder. In writing jargon, RAH is deemed to be given "One Time Rights" to anything submitted for publication unless otherwise noted in the message accompanying the contribution. You still own the material, and RAH will make no use of the material other than publishing it electronically in the usual manner. Your article may be selected for publication in a planned "Best of RAH" electronic book. If you want your copyright notice to appear in your article, place it as desired in the text you submit. Previously published articles may be submitted, but proper acknowledgement must be included: periodical name, date of previous publication. RAH Distribution System: (Sites bearing the designation will accept your contributions and forward them to the editors.) (All these systems would be good places to find sysops with a sense of humor...seemingly a rarity these days.) The Puffin's Nest Pasadena, MD. Sysop: Dave Bealer FidoNet> 1:261/1129 (410) 437-3463 14400 (V.32bis) SailNet> 53:5000/1129 CinemaNet> 68:1410/101 Current RAH Issue (text format): FReq: RAH Current RAH Issue (Readroom format): FReq: RAHR Back Issues of RAH: (text) FReq: RAHyymm.ZIP (RAH9209.ZIP for premiere issue) Back Issues of RAH: (Readroom) FReq: RAHyymmR.ZIP (RAH9302R.ZIP and later only) Complete Writers Guidelines: FReq: RAHWRITE Complete Distributor Info: FReq: RAHDIST Random Access Humor Page A-3 June 1993 RAH Gateway Systems: Pooh's Corner Fells Point, MD. Sysop: Mark Truelove FidoNet> 1:261/1131 (410) 327-9263 14400 (V.32bis) RBBSnet> 8:936/206 FilNet> 33:410/0 CandyNet> 42:1031/1 007LZ Southfield, MI. Sysop: Gary Groeller FidoNet> 1:120/636 (313) 569-4454 14400 (V.32bis) W-Net_fts> 66:636/1 The Edge of Sanity Dearborn, MI. Sysop: Tom Smith FidoNet> 1:2410/279 (313) 584-1253 9600 (V.32) SogNet> 91:7/4279 H*A*L Muskogee, OK. Sysop: Lloyd Hatley FidoNet> 1:3813/304 (918) 682-7337 14400 (V.32bis) RFNet> 73:102/1 RANet> 72:918/21 LuvNet> 77:101/1 DoorNet> 75:7918/205 The Shop Mail Only Flushing, NY. Sysop: Steve Matzura FidoNet> 1:2603/203 (718) 460-0201 14400 (V.32bis) ADAnet> 94:7180/1 JayNet> 17:99/100 WorldNet 62:4400/200 MusicNet.FTN> 88:8001/12 1:273/937 (215) 923-8026 14400 (V.32bis) PodsNet> 93:9600/2 Abiogenesis Kansas City, MO. Sysop: Scott Lent FidoNet> 1:280/310 (816) 734-4732 14400 (V.32bis) VirNet> 9:103/110 MailNet> 20:416/310 SuperNet> 43:1315/102 Datanet BBS Voorschoten, Netherlands Sysop: Ed Bakker FidoNet> 2:281/101 31-71-617784 14400 (V.32bis) Digital-Net> 15:200/512 MomNet> 71:2000/2 Supernova BBS Scotstown, Quebec Sysop: Ian Hall-Beyer FidoNet> 1:257/40 (819) 657-4603 16800 (HST/Dual) GlobalNet> 51:210/0 FrancoMedia> 101:164/103 Parity BBS Ocean Isle, NC. Sysop: Pat Finnerty FidoNet> 1:3627/107 (919) 579-1672 14400 (HST/Dual) EchoNet> 50:5018/107 RANet> 72:919/20 SoftCom Online Istanbul, Turkey Sysop: Tolga Yurderi FidoNet> 2:430/1 90-1-2655079 14400 (V.32bis) GlobalNet> 52:9000/1 IntlNet> 57:90/1 HiTNeT> 102:1001/5 RAH Official Distribution Sites: -= CANADA =- Ontario Typecast BBS Kingston 1:249/107 (613) 545-9148 V.32bis Random Access Humor Page A-4 June 1993 Quebec Supernova BBS Scotstown 1:257/40 (819) 657-4603 HST/Dual -= NETHERLANDS =- BIB Aalten Aalten 2:283/401 31-54-3774203 V.32bis BBS Sussudio Denhaag 2:281/517 31-70-3212177 V.32bis Bommel's BBS Schiedam 2:285/800 31-10-4700939 V.32bis Pleasure BBS Utrecht 2:281/705 31-30-934123 V.32bis Datanet BBS Voorschoten 2:281/101 31-71-617784 V.32bis -= SLOVENIA =- R.I.S.P. Ljubljana 2:380/103 38-61-199400 V.32bis -= TURKEY =- SoftCom Online Istanbul 2:430/1 90-1-2655079 V.32bis -= UNITED STATES =- Alabama Digital Pub. Assoc. Birmingham (NoFido) (205) 854-1660 V.32bis J & J Online Chickasaw 1:3625/440 (205) 457-5901 V.32bis California InfoMat BBS San Clemente (NoFido) (714) 492-8727 HST/Dual Automation Central San Jose 1:143/110 (408) 435-2886 V.32bis The Software Station Saugus 1:102/1106 (805) 296-9056 V.32 Marin County Net Sausalito 1:125/55 (415) 331-6241 HST/Dual Florida The Software Cuisine Miami 1:135/57 (305) 642-0754 V.32bis Flamingo Ventures Pensacola 1:3612/320 (904) 478-7716 V.32bis Hawaii Casa de la Chinchilla Honolulu (NoFido) (808) 845-1303 HST/Dual Illinois The Crossroads BBS Chicago 1:115/743 (312) 587-8756 HST/Dual The Loonatic Fringe Elk Grove 1:115/542 (708) 290-8877 V.32 Indiana Digicom Evansville 1:2310/200 (812) 479-1310 HST/Dual Maryland Wit-Tech Baltimore 1:261/1082 (410) 256-0170 V.32bis Outside the Wall Baltimore 1:261/1093 (410) 665-1855 V.32 The File Exchange Cockeysville 1:2617/104 (410) 628-7243 HST/Dual Pooh's Corner Fells Point 1:261/1131 (410) 327-9263 V.32bis The Puffin's Nest Pasadena 1:261/1129 (410) 437-3463 V.32bis Michigan The Edge of Sanity Dearborn 1:2410/279 (313) 584-1253 V.32 CALnet @node.1 Detroit 1:2410/120 (313) 836-8275 V.32 007LZ Southfield 1:120/636 (313) 569-4454 V.32bis Random Access Humor Page A-5 June 1993 Mississippi Ranch & Cattle South Columbus (NoFido) (601) 328-6486 V.32bis Missouri Abiogenesis Kansas City 1:280/310 (816) 734-4732 V.32bis New Mexico High Mesa Publishing Los Lunas 1:301/1 (505) 865-8385 V.32 Paula's House of Mail Los Lunas 1:301/301 (505) 865-4082 HST New York The Shop Mail Only Flushing 1:2603/203 (mail only) V.32bis The Wall-2 Middle Village 1:278/612 (718) 335-8784 HST/Dual Maj. Woody's Retreat New York 1:278/719 (212) 486-6281 V.32bis North Carolina Parity BBS Ocean Isle 1:3627/107 (919) 579-1672 HST/Dual Ohio Storyboard Yellow Springs 1:110/210 (513) 767-7896 V.32bis Oklahoma H*A*L Muskogee 1:3813/304 (918) 682-7337 V.32bis Oregon Bitter Butter Better Tigard 1:105/290 (503) 620-0307 V.32 Pennsylvania Cyberdrome Philadelphia 1:273/937 (215) 923-8026 V.32bis Milliways Pittsburgh 1:129/179 (412) 766-1086 HST/Dual Texas Sunlight Thru Shadows Addison (NoFido) (214) 620-8793 V.32bis Incredible BBS Burleson 1:130/82 (817) 447-2598 V.32bis Utah Vital Signs Midvale 1:311/20 (801) 255-8909 V.32bis Virginia Data Empire Fredericksburg 1:274/31 (703) 785-0422 V.32 Flying Dutchman Newport News 1:271/237 (804) 595-9383 V.32bis The Time Machine Newport News 1:271/236 (804) 599-6401 HST/Dual Washington Spokane Online Spokane 1:346/20 (509) 327-8540 V.32bis Dragon's Cave Tacoma 1:138/198 (206) 752-4160 V.32bis Wisconsin The First Step BBS Green Bay 1:139/540 (414) 499-0659 V.32bis