publication on violations of rights of human rights defenders
Harvard University Powwow (May 3, 1997)
Museum Technology Positions at NMAI (Washington, D.C.)
(And there may have been other such empty articles during this past week.)
The reason for this problem lies with the system at Texas A & M University
where NATIVE-L and the other NativeNet mailing lists are maintained. Thus
the problem is out of my control. It first surfaced while I was away early
last month and apparently occurred sporadically throughout that month. I
had hoped that the problem had been solved when the mail routing system was
changed at TAMU, but apparently it has not been. I will report the problem
on a mailing list set up for listowners of mailing lists residing at that
institution and hope that it will be resolved soon.
The easiest method to use to retrieve lost articles is via the NATIVE-L
Web archive at "http://bioc09.uthscsa.edu/natnet/archive/nl/" If anyone
cannot use this method and needs to find specific articles, please let me
know, and I'll give you an alternative method that can be used via e-mail.
(One "brute force" method is to request a complete log of the week's
postings, by sending a message containing "get native-l log9704b" to the
address "listserv@tamu.edu" - individual articles can also be retrieved,
but you need to know their article numbers, since the database search
facility is at present unavailable at TAMU, much to everyone's dismay.)
PLEASE - *DO NOT* send messages reporting such problems to the posting
address for the mailing list (which is what happens if you simply reply
to an article you have received). Send such reports to me instead at
"gst@gnosys.svle.ma.us"
I regret this problem and will do what I can to get it solved.
Gary
--
Gary S. Trujillo gst@gnosys.svle.ma.us
Somerville, Massachusetts {bu.edu,spdcc,cdp}!gnosys!gst