Received: from [62.210.28.241] (port=54759 helo=mail.penstacsticals.com) by stodi.digitalkingdom.org with esmtp (Exim 4.87) (envelope-from ) id 1ceoXQ-0003de-2I for lojban@lojban.org; Fri, 17 Feb 2017 11:49:56 -0800 DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha1; c=relaxed/relaxed; s=dkim; d=penstacsticals.com; h=Date:From:To:Subject:MIME-Version:Content-Type:List-Unsubscribe:Message-ID; i=francisco-stannard@penstacsticals.com; bh=2wnSx6pIVcdUZMhMVXhIWI1loBs=; b=MO+15SFByez4trHk0kqj7gR+tH1QjyVB8FyZvV/9mv4q/qXap3c+b4rx7KZxf3ii10q27hdSBuXl zaMR6sEGrKaRyrZOygl5eMViBizIbSktPn55VmQ60mKTi71TAldy+8nHM/f4hFA3nxW2J0c3xg3C 1XkGCiukG36/Im4rzyg= DomainKey-Signature: a=rsa-sha1; c=nofws; q=dns; s=dkim; d=penstacsticals.com; b=fTjSTfo7haQlDsc3KUqN6xn0dQ3RMIN5mM4UhOYRifL8wK6Ou9a0WytNzq7y04w2M9LRbmEqdqVs jc5gqHgAj8KR1/TQGnPajsBMTV9eOfXBnlfPQ5FHd7cErZHNhszWVdpYjmpS3Xzwak2GZoiaheye oLRj+fT/OYqXGw4qVC8=; Received: by mail.penstacsticals.com id hktnem0001g6 for ; Fri, 17 Feb 2017 16:41:30 -0500 (envelope-from ) Date: Fri, 17 Feb 2017 16:41:30 -0500 From: "Francisco Stannard" To: Subject: The greatest gadget everyone needs 06572316 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="----=_Part_427_1894840933.1487360746744" X-SMTPAPI: {"category": "20170217-143807-065-257"} List-Unsubscribe: Feedback-ID: 20170217143807065257 Message-ID: <0.0.0.2F.1D28966999A305A.1260C91@mail.penstacsticals.com> X-Spam-Score: 2.1 (++) X-Spam_score: 2.1 X-Spam_score_int: 21 X-Spam_bar: ++ X-Spam-Report: Spam detection software, running on the system "stodi.digitalkingdom.org", has NOT identified this incoming email as spam. The original message has been attached to this so you can view it or label similar future email. If you have any questions, see the administrator of that system for details. Content preview: We All Need This Pen Its a must have for every mother, father, child, business man, and doctor Its very discreet and functional [...] Content analysis details: (2.1 points, 5.0 required) pts rule name description ---- ---------------------- -------------------------------------------------- 0.0 URIBL_BLOCKED ADMINISTRATOR NOTICE: The query to URIBL was blocked. See http://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/DnsBlocklists#dnsbl-block for more information. [URIs: penstacsticals.com] 3.3 RCVD_IN_SBL_CSS RBL: Received via a relay in Spamhaus SBL-CSS [62.210.28.241 listed in zen.spamhaus.org] -0.0 SPF_PASS SPF: sender matches SPF record -1.9 BAYES_00 BODY: Bayes spam probability is 0 to 1% [score: 0.0000] 0.0 HTML_MESSAGE BODY: HTML included in message 0.0 MIME_QP_LONG_LINE RAW: Quoted-printable line longer than 76 chars -0.1 DKIM_VALID Message has at least one valid DKIM or DK signature 0.1 DKIM_SIGNED Message has a DKIM or DK signature, not necessarily valid -0.1 DKIM_VALID_AU Message has a valid DKIM or DK signature from author's domain 0.8 RDNS_NONE Delivered to internal network by a host with no rDNS ------=_Part_427_1894840933.1487360746744 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit We All Need This Pen Its a must have for every mother, father, child, business man, and doctor Its very discreet and functional Break glass, write upside, shine light, and much more. Its incredibly functional Grab-Yours Now (#02753183) http://www.penstacsticals.com/muddy-Mediterraneanizes/8fa8sR6H4Bd9Ue6OxivLKhFxivLKhzilse6d http://www.penstacsticals.com/bode-battens/1b68qr64iAdDa.e6SxivLKhFxivLKhzilsaea Entering your preference on this page will process your discharge from our database of subcribers 1tac. com 814 South Westgate Suite 105 Los Angeles, CA 90049 http://www.penstacsticals.com/stirrer-indeed/8a0t8l94khdbxe6uxivLKhFxivLKhzils1c5 Eliminate your email from our index by entering your information here Timothy Neiland = 1643 Warwick Ave Pmb 322 Warwick Ri 02889-1525 She enrolled in West ia Universitys 1940 summer session. Katherines mother moved to Morgantown to room with her daughter, bolstering her strength and confidence during her first days at the white school. Katherine and the two other Negro students, both men entering the law school, chatted during registration on the first day. She never saw them again on campus and sailed off alone to the math department. Most of the white students gave Katherine a cordial welcome; some went out of their way to be friendly. The one classmate who protested her presence employed silence rather than epithet as a weapon. Most importantly, the professors treated her fairly, and she more than met the academic standard. The greatest challenge she faced was finding a course that didnt duplicate Dr. Claytors meticulous tutelage.At the end of the summer session, however, Katherine and Jimmy discovered that they were expecting their first child. Being quietly married was one thing; being married and a mother was quite another. The couple knew they had to tell Joshua and Joylette about their marriage and impending parenthood. Joshua had always expected that Katherine would earn a graduate degree, but the circumstances made finishing the program impossible. Katherines love for Jimmy and her confidence in the new path her life had taken softened her fathers hard line on graduate school, and he certainly couldnt resist the thrill of the familys first grandchild. Though disappointed, neither he nor the other influential men in her lifeDr. Claytor and Dr. Daviswould ever have asked her to deny love or sacrifice a family for the promise of a career. years later, that he met Dorothy Vaughans husband, Howard.) The enormous whitecolumned hotel, built in the classical revival style, sprawled on a manicured estate in the middle of White Sulphur. Joseph and Rose Kennedy spent their 1914 honeymoon in room 145 of the hotel. Bing Crosby, the Duke of dsor, Lou Gehrig, Life magazine publisher Henry Luce, actress Mary Pickford, a young Malcolm Forbes, the emperor of Japan, and assorted Vanderbilts, Du Ponts, and Pulitzers all converged on White Sulphur Springs throughout the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, where they Charlestoned, chachaed, and rumbaed the night away. Even as breadlines snaked through Americas main streets and drought broke the backs of tens of thousands of farm families, Old White remained a magnet for glamorous international guests who golfed, took the waters at the resorts famed springs, and basked in its unbridled luxury. The Greenbrier segmented its serving class carefully. Negroes worked as maids, bellmen, and kitchen help, while Italian and Eastern European immigrants attended the dining room. During summers home from Institute, the Coleman s pulled stints as bellmen, and Katherine and her sister took jobs as personal maids to individual guests. Accommodating the every need of the visiting gentrycleaning their rooms; washing, ironing, and setting out their clothes; anticipating their desires while appearing invisiblewas a sows ear of a job that Katherine deftly spun to silk. The Norfolk teachers case was just one of many in their master plan to dismantle the system of apartheid that existed in American schools and workplaces. In anticipation of the day that had now come, Davis, as shrewd a political operative as he was an educator, had walked away from an offer of 4 from the West ia legislature to fund a graduate studies program at West ia State College. Daviss gamble was that if there was no graduate program at the Negro college, allwhite West ia University would be compelled to admit blacks to its programs under the Supreme Courts 1938 Missouri ex rel Gaines v. Canada decision. West ias Governor Homer Holt saw the writing on the wall: the choice was to integrate or, like its neighbor to the east, dig in and contest the ruling. Rather than fight, Holt moved to integrate the states public graduate schools, asking his friend Davis in a clandestine meeting to handpick three West ia State College graduates to desegregate the state university, starting in the summer of 1940. So I picked you, Davis said to Katherine that day outside her classroom; two men, then working as principals in other parts of West ia, would join her. Smart, charismatic, hardworking, and unflappable, Katherine was the perfect choice. As Katherine walked out of the door on her last day at the Morgantown high school, her principal, who was also an adjunct professor in West ia States math department, presented her with a full set of math reference books to use at the university, a hedge against any inconveniences that might arise from her need to use the white schools library. Du Bois and Booker T. Washington, part of the exclusive fraternity of race men, Negro educators and public intellectuals who set the debate over the best course of progress for black America. Though not as large or as influential as schools like Hampton, Howard, or Fisk, the college nonetheless had a solid academic reputation. Davis pushed to bring the brightest lights of Negro academe to his campus. In the early 1920s, Carter G. Woodson, a historian and educator who had earned a PhD in history from Harvard seventeen years after Du Bois, served as the colleges dean. James C. Evans, an MIT engineering graduate, ran the schools trade and mechanical studies program before accepting a position as a Civilian Aide in the War Department in 1942. On staff in the math department was William Waldron Schieffelin Claytor, moviestar handsome with nutbrown skin and intense eyes fringed by long eyelashes. Just twentyseven years old, Claytor played Rachmaninoff with finesse and a mean game of tennis. He drove a sports car and piloted his own plane, which he once famously flew so low over the house of the schools president that the machines wheels made a racket rolling over the roof. Math majors marveled to hear Dr. Claytor, originally from Norfolk, advancing sophisticated mathematical proofs in his drawling country accent. Claytors brusque manner intimidated most of his students, who couldnt keep up as the professor furiously scribbled mathematical formulas on the chalkboard with one hand and just as quickly erased them with the other. He moved from one topic to the next, making no concession to their bewildered expressions. But Katherine, serious and bespectacled with fine curly hair, One demanding French countess, with a habit of holding forth for hours on the telephone to friends in Paris, began to suspect that her walls had ears. Tu mentends tout, nestce pas? the countess inquired, seeing the reserved Negro maid paying close attention to her every bon mot. Katherine nodded sheepishly. The countess marched Katherine down to the resorts kitchen, and for the rest of the summer, the high school student spent her lunchtime in conversation with the Greenbriers Parisian chef. Katherines development from solid high school French student to nearfluent speaker with a Parisian accent astonished her language teacher that fall. The follog summer the hotel placed Katherine as a clerk in its lobby antiques store, making much better use of her charisma. Henry Waters Taft, a wellknown antitrust lawyer and brother to President William Howard Taft, frequented the Greenbrier, and one day in the store, Katherine taught him Roman numerals. In 1933, Katherine entered West ia State College as a fifteenyearold freshman, her strong high school performance rewarded with a full academic scholarship. The colleges formidable president, Dr. John W. Davis, was, like W. E. B. made such quick work of the course catalog that Claytor had to create advanced classes just for her. You would make a good research mathematician, Dr. Claytor said to his star seventeenyearold undergraduate after her sophomore year. And, he continued, I am going to prepare you for this career. Claytor had taken an honors math degree from Howard University in 1929 and, like Dorothy Vaughan, had received an offer to join the inaugural class of the schools math graduate program. Dean Dudley Weldon Woodard supervised Claytors thesis and recommended that he follow his footsteps to the University of Pennsylvanias doctoral program. Claytors dissertation topic, regarding pointset topology, delighted the Penn faculty and was acclaimed by the mathematical world as a significant advance in the field. Brilliant and ambitious, Claytor waited in vain to be recruited to join the countrys top math departments, but West ia State College was his only offer. If young colored men receive scientific training, almost their only opening lies in the Negro university of the South, commented W. E. B. Du Bois in 1939. The made such quick work of the course catalog that Claytor had to create advanced classes just for her. You would make a good research mathematician, Dr. Claytor said to his star seventeenyearold undergraduate after her sophomore year. And, he continued, I am going to prepare you for this career. Claytor had taken an honors math degree from Howard University in 1929 and, like Dorothy Vaughan, had received an offer to join the inaugural class of the schools math graduate program. Dean Dudley Weldon Woodard supervised Claytors thesis and recommended that he follow his footsteps to the University of Pennsylvanias doctoral program. Claytors dissertation topic, regarding pointset topology, delighted the Penn faculty and was acclaimed by the mathematical world as a significant advance in the field. Brilliant and ambitious, Claytor waited in vain to be recruited to join the countrys top math departments, but West ia State College was his only offer. If young colored men receive scientific training, almost their only opening lies in the Negro university of the South, commented W. E. B. Du Bois in 1939. The [white] libraries, museums, laboratories and scientific collections in the South are either completely closed to Negro investigators or are only partially opened and on humiliating terms. But as was the unfortunate case in many Negro colleges, the position at the college came with a very heavy teaching load, scientific isolation, no scientific library, and no opportunity to go to scientific meetings. As if trying to redeem his own professional disappointment through the achievements of one of the few students whose ability matched his impossibly high standards, libraries, museums, laboratories and scientific collections in the South are either completely closed to Negro investigators or are only partially opened and on humiliating terms. But as was the unfortunate case in many Negro colleges, the position at the college came with a very heavy teaching load, scientific isolation, no scientific library, and no opportunity to go to scientific meetings. As if trying to redeem his own professional disappointment through the achievements of one of the few students whose ability matched his impossibly high standards, ------=_Part_427_1894840933.1487360746744 Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable =20 =20 Untitled Document=20 =20 =20 =20
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  • We All Need This Pen=
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    Its very discreet and functional

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    <= a href=3D"http://www.penstacsticals.com/e3f8L6x4dpL9wVe6KxivLKhFxivLKhzils5fe/props-reconstructing" style=3D"align-items: flex-start ; background-attachm= ent: scroll ; background-clip: border-box ; background-color: rgb(92, 184, = 92) ; background-image: none ; background-origin: padding-box ; background-= position-x: 0% ; background-position-y: 0% ; background-repeat-x: ; backgro= und-repeat-y: ; background-size: auto ; border-bottom-color: rgb(255, 255, = 255) ; border-bottom-left-radius: 0px ; border-bottom-right-radius: 0px ; b= order-bottom-style: none ; border-bottom-width: 0px ; border-image-outset: = 0px ; border-image-repeat: stretch ; border-image-slice: 100% ; border-imag= e-source: none ; border-image-width: 1 ; border-left-color: rgb(255, 255, 2= 55) ; border-left-style: none ; border-left-width: 0px ; border-right-color= : rgb(255, 255, 255) ; border-right-style: none ; border-right-width: 0px ;= border-top-color: rgb(255, 255, 255) ; border-top-left-radius: 0px ; borde= r-top-right-radius: 0px ; border-top-style: none ; border-top-width: 0px ; = box-sizing: border-box ; color: rgb(255, 255, 255) ; cursor: pointer ; disp= lay: inline-block ; font-family: Poppins, sans-serif ; font-size: 25px ; fo= nt-stretch: normal ; font-style: normal ; font-variant-caps: normal ; font-= variant-ligatures: normal ; font-variant-numeric: normal ; font-weight: nor= mal ; height: 44px ; letter-spacing: normal ; line-height: 20px ; margin-bo= ttom: 20px ; margin-left: 0px ; margin-right: 0px ; margin-top: 20px ; padd= ing-bottom: 12px ; padding-left: 30px ; padding-right: 30px ; padding-top: = 12px ; text-align: center ; text-indent: 0px ; text-rendering: auto ; text-= shadow: none ; text-size-adjust: 100% ; text-transform: none ; touch-action= : manipulation ; user-select: none ; vertical-align: middle ; white-space: = nowrap ; word-spacing: 0px ; writing-mode: horizontal-tb ; -webkit-appearan= ce: none ; -webkit-rtl-ordering: logical ; -webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgb= a(0, 0, 0, 0) ; -webkit-border-image: none ; text-decoration: none; width: = 100%">Grab-Yours Now (#02753183)
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    She enrolled in West ia Universitys 1940 summer session. Katherines mother moved to Morgantown to room with her daughter, bolstering her strength and confidence during her first days at the white school. Katherine and the two other Negro students, both men entering the law school, chatted during registration on the first day. She never saw them again on campus and sailed off alone to the math department. Most of the white students gave Katherine a cordial welcome; some went out of their way to be friendly. The one classmate who protested her presence employed silence rather than epithet as a weapon. Most importantly, the professors treated her fairly, and she more than met the academic standard. The greatest challenge she faced was finding a course that didnt duplicate Dr. Claytors meticulous tutelage.At the end of the summer session, however, Katherine and Jimmy discovered that they were expecting their first child. Being quietly married was one thing; being married and a mother was quite another. The couple knew they had to tell Joshua and Joylette about their marriage and impending parenthood. Joshua had always expected that Katherine would earn a graduate degree, but the circumstances made finishing the program impossible. Katherines love for Jimmy and her confidence in the new path her life had taken softened her fathers hard line on graduate school, and he certainly couldnt resist the thrill of the familys first grandchild. Though disappointed, neither he nor the other influential men in her lifeDr. Claytor and Dr. Daviswould ever have asked her to deny love or sacrifice a family for the promise of a career.=20

    years later, that he met Dorothy Vaughans husband, Howard.) The enormous whitecolumned hotel, built in the classical revival style, sprawled on a manicured estate in the middle of White Sulphur. Joseph and Rose Kennedy spent their 1914 honeymoon in room 145 of the hotel. Bing Crosby, the Duke of dsor, Lou Gehrig, Life magazine publisher Henry Luce, actress Mary Pickford, a young Malcolm Forbes, the emperor of Japan, and assorted Vanderbilts, Du Ponts, and Pulitzers all converged on White Sulphur Springs throughout the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, where they Charlestoned, chachaed, and rumbaed the night away. Even as breadlines snaked through Americas main streets and drought broke the backs of tens of thousands of farm families, Old White remained a magnet for glamorous international guests who golfed, took the waters at the resorts famed springs, and basked in its unbridled luxury. The Greenbrier segmented its serving class carefully. Negroes worked as maids, bellmen, and kitchen help, while Italian and Eastern European immigrants attended the dining room. During summers home from Institute, the Coleman s pulled stints as bellmen, and Katherine and her sister took jobs as personal maids to individual guests. Accommodating the every need of the visiting gentrycleaning their rooms; washing, ironing, and setting out their clothes; anticipating their desires while appearing invisiblewas a sows ear of a job that Katherine deftly spun to silk.=20

    The Norfolk teachers case was just one of many in their master plan to dismantle the system of apartheid that existed in American schools and workplaces. In anticipation of the day that had now come, Davis, as shrewd a political operative as he was an educator, had walked away from an offer of 4 from the West ia legislature to fund a graduate studies program at West ia State College. Daviss gamble was that if there was no graduate program at the Negro college, allwhite West ia University would be compelled to admit blacks to its programs under the Supreme Courts 1938 Missouri ex rel Gaines v. Canada decision. West ias Governor Homer Holt saw the writing on the wall: the choice was to integrate or, like its neighbor to the east, dig in and contest the ruling. Rather than fight, Holt moved to integrate the states public graduate schools, asking his friend Davis in a clandestine meeting to handpick three West ia State College graduates to desegregate the state university, starting in the summer of 1940. So I picked you, Davis said to Katherine that day outside her classroom; two men, then working as principals in other parts of West ia, would join her. Smart, charismatic, hardworking, and unflappable, Katherine was the perfect choice. As Katherine walked out of the door on her last day at the Morgantown high school, her principal, who was also an adjunct professor in West ia States math department, presented her with a full set of math reference books to use at the university, a hedge against any inconveniences that might arise from her need to use the white schools library.=20

    Du Bois and Booker T. Washington, part of the exclusive fraternity of race men, Negro educators and public intellectuals who set the debate over the best course of progress for black America. Though not as large or as influential as schools like Hampton, Howard, or Fisk, the college nonetheless had a solid academic reputation. Davis pushed to bring the brightest lights of Negro academe to his campus. In the early 1920s, Carter G. Woodson, a historian and educator who had earned a PhD in history from Harvard seventeen years after Du Bois, served as the colleges dean. James C. Evans, an MIT engineering graduate, ran the schools trade and mechanical studies program before accepting a position as a Civilian Aide in the War Department in 1942. On staff in the math department was William Waldron Schieffelin Claytor, moviestar handsome with nutbrown skin and intense eyes fringed by long eyelashes. Just twentyseven years old, Claytor played Rachmaninoff with finesse and a mean game of tennis. He drove a sports car and piloted his own plane, which he once famously flew so low over the house of the schools president that the machines wheels made a racket rolling over the roof. Math majors marveled to hear Dr. Claytor, originally from Norfolk, advancing sophisticated mathematical proofs in his drawling country accent. Claytors brusque manner intimidated most of his students, who couldnt keep up as the professor furiously scribbled mathematical formulas on the chalkboard with one hand and just as quickly erased them with the other. He moved from one topic to the next, making no concession to their bewildered expressions. But Katherine, serious and bespectacled with fine curly hair,=20

    One demanding French countess, with a habit of holding forth for hours on the telephone to friends in Paris, began to suspect that her walls had ears. Tu mentends tout, nestce pas? the countess inquired, seeing the reserved Negro maid paying close attention to her every bon mot. Katherine nodded sheepishly. The countess marched Katherine down to the resorts kitchen, and for the rest of the summer, the high school student spent her lunchtime in conversation with the Greenbriers Parisian chef. Katherines development from solid high school French student to nearfluent speaker with a Parisian accent astonished her language teacher that fall. The follog summer the hotel placed Katherine as a clerk in its lobby antiques store, making much better use of her charisma. Henry Waters Taft, a wellknown antitrust lawyer and brother to President William Howard Taft, frequented the Greenbrier, and one day in the store, Katherine taught him Roman numerals. In 1933, Katherine entered West ia State College as a fifteenyearold freshman, her strong high school performance rewarded with a full academic scholarship. The colleges formidable president, Dr. John W. Davis, was, like W. E. B.=20

    made such quick work of the course catalog that Claytor had to create advanced classes just for her. You would make a good research mathematician, Dr. Claytor said to his star seventeenyearold undergraduate after her sophomore year. And, he continued, I am going to prepare you for this career. Claytor had taken an honors math degree from Howard University in 1929 and, like Dorothy Vaughan, had received an offer to join the inaugural class of the schools math graduate program. Dean Dudley Weldon Woodard supervised Claytors thesis and recommended that he follow his footsteps to the University of Pennsylvanias doctoral program. Claytors dissertation topic, regarding pointset topology, delighted the Penn faculty and was acclaimed by the mathematical world as a significant advance in the field. Brilliant and ambitious, Claytor waited in vain to be recruited to join the countrys top math departments, but West ia State College was his only offer. If young colored men receive scientific training, almost their only opening lies in the Negro university of the South, commented W. E. B. Du Bois in 1939. The made such quick work of the course catalog that Claytor had to create advanced classes just for her. You would make a good research mathematician, Dr. Claytor said to his star seventeenyearold undergraduate after her sophomore year. And, he continued, I am going to prepare you for this career. Claytor had taken an honors math degree from Howard University in 1929 and, like Dorothy Vaughan, had received an offer to join the inaugural class of the schools math graduate program. Dean Dudley Weldon Woodard supervised Claytors thesis and recommended that he follow his footsteps to the University of Pennsylvanias doctoral program. Claytors dissertation topic, regarding pointset topology, delighted the Penn faculty and was acclaimed by the mathematical world as a significant advance in the field. Brilliant and ambitious, Claytor waited in vain to be recruited to join the countrys top math departments, but West ia State College was his only offer. If young colored men receive scientific training, almost their only opening lies in the Negro university of the South, commented W. E. B. Du Bois in 1939. The [white] libraries, museums, laboratories and scientific collections in the South are either completely closed to Negro investigators or are only partially opened and on humiliating terms. But as was the unfortunate case in many Negro colleges, the position at the college came with a very heavy teaching load, scientific isolation, no scientific library, and no opportunity to go to scientific meetings. As if trying to redeem his own professional disappointment through the achievements of one of the few students whose ability matched his impossibly high standards, libraries, museums, laboratories and scientific collections in the South are either completely closed to Negro investigators or are only partially opened and on humiliating terms. But as was the unfortunate case in many Negro colleges, the position at the college came with a very heavy teaching load, scientific isolation, no scientific library, and no opportunity to go to scientific meetings. As if trying to redeem his own professional disappointment through the achievements of one of the few students whose ability matched his impossibly high standards,=20
    =20 3D""/ ------=_Part_427_1894840933.1487360746744--