Received: from mgmt.utoronto.ca (fmgmt.mgmt.utoronto.ca [128.100.43.253]) by mail1.texas.net (8.8.8/2.4) with SMTP id PAA24079 for ; Wed, 25 Mar 1998 15:53:41 -0600 (CST) Received: by mgmt.utoronto.ca (5.65v4.0/1.1.10.7/26Jan98-0432AM) id AA12766; Wed, 25 Mar 1998 16:49:34 -0500 From: LouisFors Message-Id: <9619c5c9.35197bde@aol.com> Date: Wed, 25 Mar 1998 16:49:16 EST To: emweb@fmgmt.mgmt.utoronto.ca Mime-Version: 1.0 Subject: Re: Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Mailer: AOL 3.0 for Windows 95 sub 49 Sender: owner-emweb@fmgmt.mgmt.utoronto.ca Precedence: bulk Reply-To: emweb@fmgmt.mgmt.utoronto.ca Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII X-UIDL: 8d9900fc623ee5115e04b4d22db55520 In a message dated 98-03-25 16:04:07 EST, Fred wrote to Marianne: > I would *highly* recommend looking into E-Library > (www.elibrary.com), for which you can get a one month free subscription; > it had on-line, full-text searchable contennt from several *thousand* > newspapers and magazines, all downloadable to your very own PC. I think > it's only $50 yearly, or maybe even less, about the cost of a paperback > academic book; for that, essentially all American journalism can be > searched from your desk. What a time to be alive... > > FF > Fred: Thanks for the tip on www.elibrary.com. I hadn't come across it yet. I suspect a lot of pay sites will open up. You may have seen my note about Northern Light, which doubtless doesn't have nearly the stuff that www.elibrary.com does. By the way Fred, did you see the note from Mike this morning asking how to delete stuff from messages? (Titled something like snip, snip, snip.) I gave him advise on how I do it, but it didn't work for him. He needs somebody who really knows what's going on. I woke up this morning with a strange memory. About a week ago you responded to my note about the wonders of ED on the Net. You responded through regular channels, that is, to everybody on emweb. You sent in the message a batch of ED addresses. I was so impressed that I sent your note to everybody on emweb, not thinking that they already had them through your message to me. Old habits break hard; new habits take a while. Louis