From dedatlast@earthlink.net Mon Mar 30 12:46:15 1998 Received: from mxu1.u.washington.edu (mxu1.u.washington.edu [140.142.32.8]) by lists.u.washington.edu (8.8.4+UW97.07/8.8.4+UW97.05) with ESMTP id MAA82386 for ; Mon, 30 Mar 1998 12:46:14 -0800 Received: from germany.it.earthlink.net (germany-c.it.earthlink.net [204.250.46.123]) by mxu1.u.washington.edu (8.8.4+UW97.07/8.8.4+UW97.09) with ESMTP id MAA13112 for ; Mon, 30 Mar 1998 12:46:13 -0800 Received: from earthlink.net (pool028-max3.la-ca-us.dialup.earthlink.net [207.217.3.178]) by germany.it.earthlink.net (8.8.7/8.8.5) with ESMTP id MAA06275 for ; Mon, 30 Mar 1998 12:46:11 -0800 (PST) Message-ID: <351FF3A5.16BDD2E9@earthlink.net> Date: Mon, 30 Mar 1998 12:34:49 -0700 From: Gregory Edwards X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.04 (Macintosh; I; PPC) MIME-Version: 1.0 To: failure@u.washington.edu Subject: Re: the big rock in the sky. References: <41e5cc12.351361da@aol.com> <3513EDB5.73C309D6@pop.pitt.edu> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; x-mac-type="54455854"; x-mac-creator="4D4F5353" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Daniel Bell-Jacobs wrote: > dude, > > the moon is more like 200,000 miles away > so it isn't closer than the moon necessarily > wouldn't it be cool if the big rock hit the moon though! > then we still might have something to look forward to > who knows what would happen! > > dan > > TchKung 4 wrote: > > > the asteroid which comes within 600,000 miles is sill gonna screw everythign > > up. Thats closer than the moon, and the moon affects the whole ocean. how > > much will somethign small and closer affect things. > > > > ? > > > > joel > > -- > Visit my webpage at http://www.pitt.edu/~djbst72 > Explore the pseudowebring of power! .