Posted on 09/10/2004 10:23:26 AM PDT by watsonfellow
Robin looks like daddy with his tranny wig on. Whats the frequency Robin.
Great diagram. Connections tell it all.
That's Robin Rather? DAMN! That is one ugly, fat dyke. Austin is FULL of them. One of the many reasons I and most of my friends left Austin years ago. Used to be a great place to live. Not anymore.
Very good point.
Your chart could add the CBS source (professor ____) who verified the documents, who adminsters or is involved in grants from Soros at his University.
It was in another thread here.
bookmarking
The latter is clearly connected to Soros, via administering a grant program funded by Soros.
And, given his curriculum, I wouldn't doubt a connection to figures like Richard Clarke and his ilk, either.
If Rather and CBS aren't going to come clean, we'll have to start taking their support group apart. Who are their "experts" and sources, what are their credentials and the axes they might grind?
Why is this going to a PO Box instead of a base addy?
Dan Rather's daughter is a lesbian and Chris Matthews' son is a homo drama student at NYU. Liberal parenting at it's finest.
What's the Font, Kenneth?
My guess is the whole lot of the left-wing media and the DNC will try to lay this on the Republicans. They're already floating the Karl-Rove-did-it defense.
As always they will have 300 possible answers each of which will change as the facts reveal it couldn't have happened that way. When they run out of stories they'll just say "that's old news let's move on(.org)"
Over the years, a number of potential coding programs had been examined and discarded. Finally, in 1963, the Department selected a system advanced by department officials, and, on April 30, 1963, Postmaster General John A. Gronouski announced that the ZIP Code would begin on July 1, 1963.
Preparing for the new system was a major task involving realignment of the mail system. The Post Office had recognized some years back that new avenues of transportation would open to the Department and began to establish focal points for air, highway, and rail transportation. Called the Metro System, these transportation centers were set up around 85 of the country's larger cities to deflect mail from congested, heavily traveled city streets. The Metro concept was expanded and eventually became the core of 552 sectional centers, each serving between 40 and 150 surrounding post offices.
Once these sectional centers were delineated, the next step in establishing the ZIP Code was to assign codes to the centers and the postal addresses they served. The existence of postal zones in the larger cities, set in motion in 1943, helped to some extent, but, in cases where the old zones failed to fit within the delivery areas, new numbers had to be assigned.
By July 1963, a five-digit code had been assigned to every address throughout the country. The first digit designated a broad geographical area of the United States, ranging from zero for the Northeast to nine for the far West. This was followed by two digits that more closely pinpointed population concentrations and those sectional centers accessible to common transportation networks. The final two digits designated small post offices or postal zones in larger zoned cities.
ZIP Code began on July 1, 1963, as scheduled. Use of the new code was not mandatory at first for anyone, but, in 1967, the Post Office required mailers of second- and third-class bulk mail to presort by ZIP Code. Although the public and mailers alike adapted well to its use, it was not enough.
http://www.usps.com/history/his2_75.htm
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great cartoon!
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