To: Lil'freeper
What's this he stuff? I was talkin' bout me!
Yes to the volumetric.
No to the UNIX though. :-(
10,980 posted on
03/02/2004 7:55:33 AM PST by
Wneighbor
(I got a need for speed and I don't mean the drugstore kind)
To: Wneighbor
"gurus" tend to be male in my mind..
but if ya had said DIVA, there'd be no confusion about who you were talking about. ;)
10,983 posted on
03/02/2004 8:02:04 AM PST by
Lil'freeper
(By all that we hold dear on this good Earth I bid you stand, men of the West!)
To: Wneighbor
More in case someone doesn't know. ;)
Fifty-four delegates of the Convention of 1836 began meeting on March 1 at the village of Washington-on-the-Brazos. Each of the settlements of Texas were represented by delegates elected one month earlier. Richard Ellis was elected president of the convention and Herbert S. Kimble secretary.
With very little time to accomplish its mission, delegates of Convention of 1836 wrote and adopted the Texas Declaration of Independence, prepared a Constitution for the newly formed Republic, and organized an an interim government. These actions were accomplished amid almost daily reports of the invasion on Texas soil by Mexico, and the collapse of the Alamo and destruction of its defenders.
The ad interim government that was created by the delegates took office at the close of the convention, and served until the following October, when general elections could be held. Officers of the newly formed Republic included:
David G. Burnet, President
Lorenzo de Zavala, Vice-president
Samuel P. Carson, Secretary of State
Thomas J. Rusk, Secretary of War
Bailey Hardeman, Secretary of Treasury
David Thomas, Attorney General
With their mission accomplished, the delegates and the newly formed government of the Republic of Texas adjourned in haste during the early morning hours of March 17, following news of the approach of Santa Anna and the Mexican army.
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