[Nfb-science] Nfb-science Digest, Vol 62, Issue 7

Michael Whapples mwhapples at aim.com
Tue Oct 4 18:59:08 UTC 2011


Hello,
There are a few options if you simply want a tool for writing mathematical 
documents.

Firstly MathType can be used with a screen reader in word, you will need to 
use the LaTeX input mode. To toggle to LaTeX input mode you use 
alt+backslash (I have heard only works by default for english keyboards). 
Then for your equations you will need to use LaTeX notation, using things 
like the dollar signs to surround an inline equation, etc.

Another option, coming from an accessibility angle, is the chattyinfty 
editor which can be found at http://www.inftyproject.org.

The final option I would suggest, however I only suggest it for those who 
will be doing significant amount of maths writing would be to learn the 
LaTeX typesetting language, which should be capable of about anything you 
want to write. However LaTeX can take some learning, particularly when you 
are writing the whole document in it (unlike MathType where you only use 
LaTeX notation for equations). As for where to learn LaTeX, there are many 
tutorials out there on the internet, all taking different approaches and it 
probably is best for you to look at a few and decide what suits you. There 
is a LaTeX book on wikibooks (http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX). Also 
another resource may be the TeX user groups (http://www.tug.org) where there 
is information on LaTeX, links to tutorials and other resources and the 
forums/mailing lists.

Michael whapples
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Nikhil Dama" <nickdama12 at gmail.com>
To: <nfb-science at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Tuesday, October 04, 2011 6:59 PM
Subject: Re: [Nfb-science] Nfb-science Digest, Vol 62, Issue 7


> Hi,
>
> I use JAWS screen reader. I was trying to find a software that would
> work well with typing math on the computer. I tried Vertual Pencil. It
> was not helpful to me, because I am in calculus. The software is not
> designed for calculus  notation from my experience with it. I also
> tried Math Type I found it does not work with screen readers. It is a
> good software except for that one problem. Do you have any other
> suggestions for software that I can write math on the computer?
>
> On 9/30/11, nfb-science-request at nfbnet.org
> <nfb-science-request at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>> Send Nfb-science mailing list submissions to
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>> When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific
>> than "Re: Contents of Nfb-science digest..."
>>
>>
>> Today's Topics:
>>
>>    1. If Google Was A Religion, I'd Join The Church (Fred Wurtzel)
>>    2. Re: If Google Was A Religion, I'd Join The Church
>>       (Larry D. Keeler)
>>    3. Re: If Google Was A Religion, I'd Join The Church (Fred Wurtzel)
>>
>>
>> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>> Message: 1
>> Date: Thu, 29 Sep 2011 22:02:27 -0400
>> From: "Fred Wurtzel" <f.wurtzel at att.net>
>> To: "'Mike Ellis'" <emailmee at comcast.net>, <mikeeellis at comcast.net>,
>> "'George Wurtzel'" <gmwurtzel at gmail.com>, <marywurtzel at att.net>
>> Subject: [Nfb-science] If Google Was A Religion, I'd Join The Church
>> Message-ID: <023f01cc7f15$02bccc30$08366490$@att.net>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
>>
>> hello,
>>
>>
>>
>> I love Google and wish them a happy Birthday.  here's a short history.
>>
>>
>>
>> Warm Regardsk,
>>
>>
>>
>> Fred
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Doodle Celebrates Google's 13th Birthday: Here are 13 Milestones
>>
>> By [42]John P. Mello Jr., [43]PCWorld    Sep 27, 2011 9:53 AM
>>
>> Google Birthday Doodle Google enters its teens today and celebrates
>>
>> with a Google Doodle of what else? a birthday cake as it has done in
>>
>> previous years.
>>
>> Today's doodle is a little more elaborate than most previous birthday
>>
>> doodles. The Google logo is there, all right. But you might notice
>>
>> there's an exclamation point after the logo. That was part of the
>>
>> original emblem--something it ditched, thankfully, in 1999. The logo is
>>
>> also obscured behind a birthday cake, presents, party streamers, cone
>>
>> hats and balloons.
>>
>> 1998
>>
>> Although most of the time Google celebrates its birthday today, the
>>
>> google.com domain was registered on Sept. 15, 1997 and Google the
>>
>> company wasn't incorporated until Sept. 4, 1998. On at least two
>>
>> occasions in the past, Google has split the difference in those dates
>>
>> and [44]celebrated its birthday on September 7.
>>
>> Google didn't start posting birthday doodles to its main search page
>>
>> until its fourth year anniversary in 2002.
>>
>> True to high-tech mythos, Google was started in a garage by two
>>
>> Stanford students, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, with $100,000 in seed
>>
>> money from Andy Bechtolsheim, a co-founder of Sun Microsystems.
>>
>> Google Birthday Doodles
>>
>> 1999
>>
>> But it didn't stay in that garage for long. Less than a year after
>>
>> Google incorporated, it had already moved twice when in June 1999, it
>>
>> announced it had secured $25 million in funding for its operations.
>>
>> 2000
>>
>> By 2000, things began percolating for the search company. Its main
>>
>> rival, Yahoo!, announced it would be using Google's search engine for
>>
>> its site. Meanwhile, it hit the 100 million search queries a day mark
>>
>> and launched its AdSense program.
>>
>> 2001
>>
>> The next year the company went global, setting up its first
>>
>> international office in Tokyo. It also added a new chairman of the
>>
>> board, [45]Eric Schmidt, who soon became CEO of the company, and it
>>
>> branched out into image searching.
>>
>> 2002
>>
>> Google Labs, where the company develops new offerings, as well as
>>
>> Froogle, its shopping search engine, and Google News were all launched
>>
>> in 2002.
>>
>> 2003
>>
>> The next year Google got into the blogging business with the
>>
>> acquisition of Pyra Labs, maker of Blogger. It also launched Google
>>
>> Print, now Google Book Search, which gave searchers the power to ferret
>>
>> through excerpts from thousands of books in digital form. 2003 was also
>>
>> the year that lexicographers recognized a new verb in the English
>>
>> language: to google.
>>
>> 2004
>>
>> In 2004, Google's search index reached eight billion items. As it moved
>>
>> into its new digs, the Googleplex, its garage days were a distant
>>
>> memory. A most important development during the year was the launch of
>>
>> its web-based mail service, Gmail.
>>
>> 2005
>>
>> Maps became a focus of the company in 2005, along with customizable
>>
>> home pages (iGoogle), an online news reader (Google Reader) and Google
>>
>> Analytics, for discovering Web metrics. The company also began taking
>>
>> baby steps into the wireless realm by introducing mobile versions of
>>
>> Gmail, Blogger and Search.
>>
>> 2006
>>
>> In 2006, Google bought YouTube, and the following year it further
>>
>> expanded the global reach of Google Maps and the audience for
>>
>> applications like Google Docs and Gmail. It also added street level
>>
>> photography to its maps offering, which opened a can of privacy worms
>>
>> for the company around the world.
>>
>> 2008
>>
>> Google continued to reach beyond its search roots in 2008 when it
>>
>> launched a mobile phone operating system to compete with Apple's
>>
>> popular iPhone, and it even waded into the browser wars with its own
>>
>> offering, Chrome.
>>
>> 2009
>>
>> Browsers and mobile operating systems weren't enough for the company,
>>
>> though, and in 2009, it launched its own lightweight operating system,
>>
>> Chrome OS, although it wasn't until 2011 that any computers running the
>>
>> system began shipping in volume.
>>
>> 2010
>>
>> By 2010, Google was a full fledged behemoth. As such, news about its
>>
>> gee-whiz developments began to take a back seat to less flattering
>>
>> notices. There was a [46]WiFi scandal, where it was discovered the
>>
>> company was collecting information from open wireless networks. It
>>
>> joined Verizon in a [47]net neutrality pact that appeared to some to be
>>
>> jumping in bed with the devil.
>>
>> 2011
>>
>> In a move that could transform the company yet again, Google in 2011,
>>
>> entered into an agreement to acquire the mobile phone maker
>>
>> [48]Motorola Mobility for about US$12.5 billion. Also in 2011, in one
>>
>> of the largest settlements ever, Google agreed to [49]pay $500 million
>>
>> to settle a case involving the importation of illegal prescription
>>
>> drugs into the United States.
>>
>> Over the last 13 years, Google has done an enormous amount to make the
>>
>> lives of many people easier and more productive. It's made a few
>>
>> missteps along the way, and it will undoubtedly make a few in the
>>
>> future. By and large, though, it appears to have tried to live up to
>>
>> its motto, "Don't be evil." That's something most of Google's users
>>
>> hope the company will continue to do for the next 13 years of its
>>
>>
>>
>> ------------------------------
>>
>> Message: 2
>> Date: Thu, 29 Sep 2011 22:17:51 -0400
>> From: "Larry D. Keeler" <lkeeler at comcast.net>
>> To: "NFB Science and Engineering Division List"
>> <nfb-science at nfbnet.org>
>> Subject: Re: [Nfb-science] If Google Was A Religion, I'd Join The
>> Church
>> Message-ID: <DFB1CA20E544495A99EBB31B43C715CA at yourec0540d030>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
>> reply-type=original
>>
>> Would Googles followers be called Googoyles or would it just be the 
>> priests
>> who would have to hold the keys to the machine!
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Fred Wurtzel" <f.wurtzel at att.net>
>> To: "'Mike Ellis'" <emailmee at comcast.net>; <mikeeellis at comcast.net>;
>> "'George Wurtzel'" <gmwurtzel at gmail.com>; <marywurtzel at att.net>
>> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2011 10:02 PM
>> Subject: [Nfb-science] If Google Was A Religion, I'd Join The Church
>>
>>
>>> hello,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I love Google and wish them a happy Birthday.  here's a short history.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Warm Regardsk,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Fred
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Doodle Celebrates Google's 13th Birthday: Here are 13 Milestones
>>>
>>> By [42]John P. Mello Jr., [43]PCWorld    Sep 27, 2011 9:53 AM
>>>
>>> Google Birthday Doodle Google enters its teens today and celebrates
>>>
>>> with a Google Doodle of what else? a birthday cake as it has done in
>>>
>>> previous years.
>>>
>>> Today's doodle is a little more elaborate than most previous birthday
>>>
>>> doodles. The Google logo is there, all right. But you might notice
>>>
>>> there's an exclamation point after the logo. That was part of the
>>>
>>> original emblem--something it ditched, thankfully, in 1999. The logo is
>>>
>>> also obscured behind a birthday cake, presents, party streamers, cone
>>>
>>> hats and balloons.
>>>
>>> 1998
>>>
>>> Although most of the time Google celebrates its birthday today, the
>>>
>>> google.com domain was registered on Sept. 15, 1997 and Google the
>>>
>>> company wasn't incorporated until Sept. 4, 1998. On at least two
>>>
>>> occasions in the past, Google has split the difference in those dates
>>>
>>> and [44]celebrated its birthday on September 7.
>>>
>>> Google didn't start posting birthday doodles to its main search page
>>>
>>> until its fourth year anniversary in 2002.
>>>
>>> True to high-tech mythos, Google was started in a garage by two
>>>
>>> Stanford students, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, with $100,000 in seed
>>>
>>> money from Andy Bechtolsheim, a co-founder of Sun Microsystems.
>>>
>>> Google Birthday Doodles
>>>
>>> 1999
>>>
>>> But it didn't stay in that garage for long. Less than a year after
>>>
>>> Google incorporated, it had already moved twice when in June 1999, it
>>>
>>> announced it had secured $25 million in funding for its operations.
>>>
>>> 2000
>>>
>>> By 2000, things began percolating for the search company. Its main
>>>
>>> rival, Yahoo!, announced it would be using Google's search engine for
>>>
>>> its site. Meanwhile, it hit the 100 million search queries a day mark
>>>
>>> and launched its AdSense program.
>>>
>>> 2001
>>>
>>> The next year the company went global, setting up its first
>>>
>>> international office in Tokyo. It also added a new chairman of the
>>>
>>> board, [45]Eric Schmidt, who soon became CEO of the company, and it
>>>
>>> branched out into image searching.
>>>
>>> 2002
>>>
>>> Google Labs, where the company develops new offerings, as well as
>>>
>>> Froogle, its shopping search engine, and Google News were all launched
>>>
>>> in 2002.
>>>
>>> 2003
>>>
>>> The next year Google got into the blogging business with the
>>>
>>> acquisition of Pyra Labs, maker of Blogger. It also launched Google
>>>
>>> Print, now Google Book Search, which gave searchers the power to ferret
>>>
>>> through excerpts from thousands of books in digital form. 2003 was also
>>>
>>> the year that lexicographers recognized a new verb in the English
>>>
>>> language: to google.
>>>
>>> 2004
>>>
>>> In 2004, Google's search index reached eight billion items. As it moved
>>>
>>> into its new digs, the Googleplex, its garage days were a distant
>>>
>>> memory. A most important development during the year was the launch of
>>>
>>> its web-based mail service, Gmail.
>>>
>>> 2005
>>>
>>> Maps became a focus of the company in 2005, along with customizable
>>>
>>> home pages (iGoogle), an online news reader (Google Reader) and Google
>>>
>>> Analytics, for discovering Web metrics. The company also began taking
>>>
>>> baby steps into the wireless realm by introducing mobile versions of
>>>
>>> Gmail, Blogger and Search.
>>>
>>> 2006
>>>
>>> In 2006, Google bought YouTube, and the following year it further
>>>
>>> expanded the global reach of Google Maps and the audience for
>>>
>>> applications like Google Docs and Gmail. It also added street level
>>>
>>> photography to its maps offering, which opened a can of privacy worms
>>>
>>> for the company around the world.
>>>
>>> 2008
>>>
>>> Google continued to reach beyond its search roots in 2008 when it
>>>
>>> launched a mobile phone operating system to compete with Apple's
>>>
>>> popular iPhone, and it even waded into the browser wars with its own
>>>
>>> offering, Chrome.
>>>
>>> 2009
>>>
>>> Browsers and mobile operating systems weren't enough for the company,
>>>
>>> though, and in 2009, it launched its own lightweight operating system,
>>>
>>> Chrome OS, although it wasn't until 2011 that any computers running the
>>>
>>> system began shipping in volume.
>>>
>>> 2010
>>>
>>> By 2010, Google was a full fledged behemoth. As such, news about its
>>>
>>> gee-whiz developments began to take a back seat to less flattering
>>>
>>> notices. There was a [46]WiFi scandal, where it was discovered the
>>>
>>> company was collecting information from open wireless networks. It
>>>
>>> joined Verizon in a [47]net neutrality pact that appeared to some to be
>>>
>>> jumping in bed with the devil.
>>>
>>> 2011
>>>
>>> In a move that could transform the company yet again, Google in 2011,
>>>
>>> entered into an agreement to acquire the mobile phone maker
>>>
>>> [48]Motorola Mobility for about US$12.5 billion. Also in 2011, in one
>>>
>>> of the largest settlements ever, Google agreed to [49]pay $500 million
>>>
>>> to settle a case involving the importation of illegal prescription
>>>
>>> drugs into the United States.
>>>
>>> Over the last 13 years, Google has done an enormous amount to make the
>>>
>>> lives of many people easier and more productive. It's made a few
>>>
>>> missteps along the way, and it will undoubtedly make a few in the
>>>
>>> future. By and large, though, it appears to have tried to live up to
>>>
>>> its motto, "Don't be evil." That's something most of Google's users
>>>
>>> hope the company will continue to do for the next 13 years of its
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Nfb-science mailing list
>>> Nfb-science at nfbnet.org
>>> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/nfb-science_nfbnet.org
>>> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for
>>> Nfb-science:
>>> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/nfb-science_nfbnet.org/lkeeler%40comcast.net
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ------------------------------
>>
>> Message: 3
>> Date: Fri, 30 Sep 2011 00:45:07 -0400
>> From: "Fred Wurtzel" <f.wurtzel at att.net>
>> To: "'NFB Science and Engineering Division List'"
>> <nfb-science at nfbnet.org>
>> Subject: Re: [Nfb-science] If Google Was A Religion, I'd Join The
>> Church
>> Message-ID: <028201cc7f2b$bade8bd0$309ba370$@att.net>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm not sure, but the choir would sing in algorythm.
>>
>> Warmest Regards,
>>
>> Fred
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: nfb-science-bounces at nfbnet.org 
>> [mailto:nfb-science-bounces at nfbnet.org]
>> On Behalf Of Larry D. Keeler
>> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2011 10:18 PM
>> To: NFB Science and Engineering Division List
>> Subject: Re: [Nfb-science] If Google Was A Religion, I'd Join The Church
>>
>> Would Googles followers be called Googoyles or would it just be the 
>> priests
>> who would have to hold the keys to the machine!
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Fred Wurtzel" <f.wurtzel at att.net>
>> To: "'Mike Ellis'" <emailmee at comcast.net>; <mikeeellis at comcast.net>;
>> "'George Wurtzel'" <gmwurtzel at gmail.com>; <marywurtzel at att.net>
>> Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2011 10:02 PM
>> Subject: [Nfb-science] If Google Was A Religion, I'd Join The Church
>>
>>
>>> hello,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I love Google and wish them a happy Birthday.  here's a short history.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Warm Regardsk,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Fred
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Doodle Celebrates Google's 13th Birthday: Here are 13 Milestones
>>>
>>> By [42]John P. Mello Jr., [43]PCWorld    Sep 27, 2011 9:53 AM
>>>
>>> Google Birthday Doodle Google enters its teens today and celebrates
>>>
>>> with a Google Doodle of what else? a birthday cake as it has done in
>>>
>>> previous years.
>>>
>>> Today's doodle is a little more elaborate than most previous birthday
>>>
>>> doodles. The Google logo is there, all right. But you might notice
>>>
>>> there's an exclamation point after the logo. That was part of the
>>>
>>> original emblem--something it ditched, thankfully, in 1999. The logo
>>> is
>>>
>>> also obscured behind a birthday cake, presents, party streamers, cone
>>>
>>> hats and balloons.
>>>
>>> 1998
>>>
>>> Although most of the time Google celebrates its birthday today, the
>>>
>>> google.com domain was registered on Sept. 15, 1997 and Google the
>>>
>>> company wasn't incorporated until Sept. 4, 1998. On at least two
>>>
>>> occasions in the past, Google has split the difference in those dates
>>>
>>> and [44]celebrated its birthday on September 7.
>>>
>>> Google didn't start posting birthday doodles to its main search page
>>>
>>> until its fourth year anniversary in 2002.
>>>
>>> True to high-tech mythos, Google was started in a garage by two
>>>
>>> Stanford students, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, with $100,000 in seed
>>>
>>> money from Andy Bechtolsheim, a co-founder of Sun Microsystems.
>>>
>>> Google Birthday Doodles
>>>
>>> 1999
>>>
>>> But it didn't stay in that garage for long. Less than a year after
>>>
>>> Google incorporated, it had already moved twice when in June 1999, it
>>>
>>> announced it had secured $25 million in funding for its operations.
>>>
>>> 2000
>>>
>>> By 2000, things began percolating for the search company. Its main
>>>
>>> rival, Yahoo!, announced it would be using Google's search engine for
>>>
>>> its site. Meanwhile, it hit the 100 million search queries a day mark
>>>
>>> and launched its AdSense program.
>>>
>>> 2001
>>>
>>> The next year the company went global, setting up its first
>>>
>>> international office in Tokyo. It also added a new chairman of the
>>>
>>> board, [45]Eric Schmidt, who soon became CEO of the company, and it
>>>
>>> branched out into image searching.
>>>
>>> 2002
>>>
>>> Google Labs, where the company develops new offerings, as well as
>>>
>>> Froogle, its shopping search engine, and Google News were all launched
>>>
>>> in 2002.
>>>
>>> 2003
>>>
>>> The next year Google got into the blogging business with the
>>>
>>> acquisition of Pyra Labs, maker of Blogger. It also launched Google
>>>
>>> Print, now Google Book Search, which gave searchers the power to
>>> ferret
>>>
>>> through excerpts from thousands of books in digital form. 2003 was
>>> also
>>>
>>> the year that lexicographers recognized a new verb in the English
>>>
>>> language: to google.
>>>
>>> 2004
>>>
>>> In 2004, Google's search index reached eight billion items. As it
>>> moved
>>>
>>> into its new digs, the Googleplex, its garage days were a distant
>>>
>>> memory. A most important development during the year was the launch of
>>>
>>> its web-based mail service, Gmail.
>>>
>>> 2005
>>>
>>> Maps became a focus of the company in 2005, along with customizable
>>>
>>> home pages (iGoogle), an online news reader (Google Reader) and Google
>>>
>>> Analytics, for discovering Web metrics. The company also began taking
>>>
>>> baby steps into the wireless realm by introducing mobile versions of
>>>
>>> Gmail, Blogger and Search.
>>>
>>> 2006
>>>
>>> In 2006, Google bought YouTube, and the following year it further
>>>
>>> expanded the global reach of Google Maps and the audience for
>>>
>>> applications like Google Docs and Gmail. It also added street level
>>>
>>> photography to its maps offering, which opened a can of privacy worms
>>>
>>> for the company around the world.
>>>
>>> 2008
>>>
>>> Google continued to reach beyond its search roots in 2008 when it
>>>
>>> launched a mobile phone operating system to compete with Apple's
>>>
>>> popular iPhone, and it even waded into the browser wars with its own
>>>
>>> offering, Chrome.
>>>
>>> 2009
>>>
>>> Browsers and mobile operating systems weren't enough for the company,
>>>
>>> though, and in 2009, it launched its own lightweight operating system,
>>>
>>> Chrome OS, although it wasn't until 2011 that any computers running
>>> the
>>>
>>> system began shipping in volume.
>>>
>>> 2010
>>>
>>> By 2010, Google was a full fledged behemoth. As such, news about its
>>>
>>> gee-whiz developments began to take a back seat to less flattering
>>>
>>> notices. There was a [46]WiFi scandal, where it was discovered the
>>>
>>> company was collecting information from open wireless networks. It
>>>
>>> joined Verizon in a [47]net neutrality pact that appeared to some to
>>> be
>>>
>>> jumping in bed with the devil.
>>>
>>> 2011
>>>
>>> In a move that could transform the company yet again, Google in 2011,
>>>
>>> entered into an agreement to acquire the mobile phone maker
>>>
>>> [48]Motorola Mobility for about US$12.5 billion. Also in 2011, in one
>>>
>>> of the largest settlements ever, Google agreed to [49]pay $500 million
>>>
>>> to settle a case involving the importation of illegal prescription
>>>
>>> drugs into the United States.
>>>
>>> Over the last 13 years, Google has done an enormous amount to make the
>>>
>>> lives of many people easier and more productive. It's made a few
>>>
>>> missteps along the way, and it will undoubtedly make a few in the
>>>
>>> future. By and large, though, it appears to have tried to live up to
>>>
>>> its motto, "Don't be evil." That's something most of Google's users
>>>
>>> hope the company will continue to do for the next 13 years of its
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Nfb-science mailing list
>>> Nfb-science at nfbnet.org
>>> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/nfb-science_nfbnet.org
>>> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for
>>> Nfb-science:
>>> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/nfb-science_nfbnet.org/lkeeler%40com
>>> cast.net
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Nfb-science mailing list
>> Nfb-science at nfbnet.org
>> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/nfb-science_nfbnet.org
>> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for
>> Nfb-science:
>> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/nfb-science_nfbnet.org/f.wurtzel%40att.net
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ------------------------------
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Nfb-science mailing list
>> Nfb-science at nfbnet.org
>> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/nfb-science_nfbnet.org
>>
>>
>> End of Nfb-science Digest, Vol 62, Issue 7
>> ******************************************
>>
>
> _______________________________________________
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> Nfb-science at nfbnet.org
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/nfb-science_nfbnet.org
> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for 
> Nfb-science:
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/nfb-science_nfbnet.org/mwhapples%40aim.com
>
>
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