Eric asks the perennial and proverbial question, and the key one in the
knowledge management era. First, if I were a newbie in a particular forum, how
do I cull the key elements of relevance to me so that I can either answer my
pressing question or so that I can bring myself up to speed with
The exchange between Brad McCormick and George Schrader on the issue of transport
takes on new perspective when informed by Reg Morrison's recent book, The Spirit
in the Gene. Morrison argues that any effort other than radical change, such as
Brad suggests, when quoting DeBord, will lead to a
Date: Mon, 6 Sep 1999 15:40:40 -0400
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Date: Mon, 06 Sep 1999 19:50:14 -0400
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Date: Tue, 7 Sep 1999 11:19:14 -0400
H. Hart wrote:
If you have not seen this, "The Corporate Elite Bill of Rights" below
was written by a graduate student in Georgia who got angry.
David C. Larkin
---
"CORPORATE ELITE BILL OF RIGHTS"
I wrote but didn't send this in February. If Eva or Jay are still out
there, I would still like their comments
Doug Vincent
--
Eva - Jay's Society of Sloth does not include "a continuous debate about
Sally fowarded a Georgia student's "Corporate Bill of Rights".
Before the Bill of Rights came the Declaration of Independence. Here's
my take on an up to date reading. (Non-USA readers unfamiliar with
American historical documents and who are sufficiently entertained may
want to look up the
tabeles wrote:
The exchange between Brad McCormick and George Schrader on the issue of transport
takes on new perspective when informed by Reg Morrison's recent book, The Spirit
in the Gene. Morrison argues that any effort other than radical change, such as
Brad suggests, when quoting
S. Lerner wrote:
[snip]
Study: Americans Work Longest Hours
By Geir Moulson
Associated Press Writer
Sunday, September 5, 1999; 8:01 p.m. EDT
GENEVA (AP) -- Americans work the longest hours in the industrialized
world, overtaking the Japanese, according to a United Nations study
Most of us have seen the bumper sticker that says, "I'd rather be
fishing." I saw an interesting variation this week with pleasing
ambiguity:
WORK is for people who can't FISH
I'd give a purty to know whether the driver of that car was an
idle-hours sports fisherman or a commercial
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