26 hours a day - that's all FR asks.
yeah I just heard him as well--- he said the freepers are pretty amazing breaking stories from time to time---
Hello, right back at ya!!!!
Keep up the good work.
Love the Independnce Day Song, gets me all fired up.
Just heard him....and we have gals too, although he just mentioned guys!!
Just heard him....and we have gals too, although he just mentioned guys!!
Keep digging on this one, Sean, just like we FReepers are!
And, by the way, fark.com had a link to the FR thread on this before Matt Drudge added word to his site.
Typed single-stroke superscript "th"? Ha!
Sean Hannity? Didn't he write a book?
Well Shawn, please be sure to mention us on the TV PROGRAM TONIGHT.
Hannity gave you credit. ;)
Free Republicon the internet what Fox news, Rush Limbaugh, Hannity, et al on the radio.
Good luck trying to get over on us, liberals.
All your bases are belong to us.
FREEPERS ROCK and are a force to be RECKON with!! THANK YOU FREEPERS YOU ARE THE BEST!! Simply the BEST!!
What's up Sean? You're a great American!
Jim Robinson should be very proud--this place is a delight!
RD
Well, whoop-de-doo!
Sean should be happy when he's mentioned on FR.
There's much more talent here.
He just has a little bigger audience.
Well, all of freeper repeaterville has it now Though I saw it first on powerlineblog.com Yes, there were other fonts available for insert into the ball-type typewriters. The issue here (as I understand it) is that the documents are not produced in a unispace font (like courier), but a font with different spacing for different letters (the little "i" is narrower than the capital "O", etc) like the popular Times Roman fonts. It was theoretically possible (something called a varitype machine), but highly difficult to produce something like this document - and would never be done on a personal memo. The memos are also on 8.5x11" stock when the military standard was 8x10.5 And the memo actually has the smaller font-size "th" in a couple places ("187th") - which was not possible on ANY typewriter in 1973. In short, they conclude it was produced on a modern word processor, not a 1970's typewriter. And the author is not around to verify them (dead). Now, I have NOT seen the documents yet and don't know how much (or any) of this is true. Merely the accusation.... But it does concern me. If they are forgeries - the election is likely over.
Col. Killian died a long time ago. There is no conceivable reason he would have been keeping a unique file on fairly trivial personnel issues concerning a junior officer about to leave the service. If there are NOT hundreds of comparable Killian memos on assorted routine business matters, something is wrong.
FWIW, I don't believe these documents are forged, mainly because it would be incredibly reckless to pull a stunt like that on what is, at bottom, still a triviality.
The blog says it is smaller. So to accomplish it you would have to roll the platten up and replace the ball - then type two letters and replace the ball again and roll it back down. I've found a source that says proportional fonts were possible, but hasn't found THE font involved yet (I've seen it now, it sure looks like a member of the Times Roman family) as being available for the Selectric. None of the other documents from that command (of those that were released) indicate anything like this was in use though. I now begin to worry a tad.
Hello Sean! God bless you and your family!
I was listening to his talking points last night, he must be spending some quality time out here.
Hey Sean, back at you.
JJ