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Old April 6th 04, 02:27 PM
David
 
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The people who think the government is doing a good job aren't the
type who are likely to read anything.

On Tue, 06 Apr 2004 01:18:29 GMT, m II
wrote:

Paul_Morphy wrote:

The Richard Clarke book is a case in point. Although it is selling well, it
is not changing many peoples' minds about the role of the government before
and after 9/11. People who were inclined to think the government failed find
support in the book, but people who think the government is doing a fine job
don't believe it.


The people who think the government is doing a fine job won't be buying
the book at all.



I do miss the old days, though. There was nothing so enervating as listening
to R. Tirana, when Albania hated everybody.



I used to think enervating meant something like invigorating, or
energizing. Then I found out it meant the OPPOSITE of what I thought...



mike


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Old April 6th 04, 06:16 PM
m II
 
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David wrote:

The people who think the government is doing a good job aren't the
type who are likely to read anything.


;-)





mike
--

__ __ __ __ __ __ __ __
/ /\ / /\ / /\ / /\ / /\ / /\ / /\ / /
/ /\ \/ /\ \/ /\ \/ /
/_/ \/_/ \/_/ \/_/ \/_/ \/_/ \/_/ \/_/

..let the cat out to reply..
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Old April 7th 04, 01:21 AM
Jim Haynes
 
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Here's a question. Back in the late 1930s-early 1940s many homes had
big console radios with standard broadcast AM and a couple of shortwave
bands. Table radios with shortwave bands were abundant too. Was there
really a lot of shortwave listening going on in that time period?
Or did manufacturers put shortwave into radios as sort of a "luxury"
feature? (or way to one-up your neighbors)
--

jhaynes at alumni dot uark dot edu

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Old April 7th 04, 05:38 AM
WShoots1
 
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Was there really a lot of shortwave listening going on in that time period?


I recall in the Thirties that the people with real jobs had serious aerials on
their roofs. But I also recall that all I heard, from out on a sidewalk, were
MW stations broadcasting Stella Dallas and other soaps. G In the evening, we
kids would take over and listen to The Lone Ranger, Captain Midnight, et al.

When I was 15 (1945), I sometimes substituted on my sister's baby sitting job.
The homeowner had a big floor Zenith. My ex-WU op mom had already taught me
wire Morse, so I became fascinated by the radio code I heard thumping wartime
stuff on shortwave. (Sigh...) That got me interested in going for my ham
ticket. (I got it in 1947.)

73,
Bill, K5BY
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Old April 7th 04, 05:45 AM
WShoots1
 
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This reminds me... The speakers in those old radios had electromagnets. The
larger coil around the cone's coil doubled as a filter choke in the power
supply.

Replacing one of those speakers with a perm mag jobbie required also installing
a smoothing choke for the power supply.

But those old speakers did have punch.

Bill, K5BY


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