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#1
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Happy New Year
I just want to wish each and every one of you the very best that life has to offer in 2004. We lost one member of our community last year(2003) and we all should be very thankful to have seen the ball drop on 2004 and be living testiments to the blessed ways of OLASJC. God bless us everyone
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#2
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happy new years guys... I still have an hour and a half, but I'm sure there's quite a few who are already into 2004. Hope you all have a safe and happy new year surrounded by loved ones!
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#3
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Happy New Year. May your Benz not rust, may your oil not appear milky, and may your climate control cool and warm as commanded.
Here's a link to NY Times I thought you might enjoy. The article is about scientific description of time, relatively speaking. I hope you enjoy his essay as much as I did. Botnst http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/01/opinion/01GREE.html?pagewanted=1 The Time We Thought We Knew By BRIAN GREENE Published: January 1, 2004 It was an unlikely place to be at 4:30 a.m., since I'm not much on celebrations and take minimal notice of most every holiday. Yet, a few years back, on a rainy Dec. 31 morning, I stood in Times Square, together with a handful of other early revelers, awaiting images on a giant screen of festivities on Kiribati, the first inhabited place on earth to welcome the new year. I was, as I recognized through the fog of exhaustion and the hazy steam billowing from manhole covers, re-enacting a struggle I'd been engaged in for decades. Time dominates experience. We live by watch and calendar. We eagerly trade megahertz for gigahertz. We spend billions of dollars to conceal time's bodily influences. We uproariously celebrate particular moments in time even as we quietly despair of its passage. But what is time? To paraphrase Justice Potter Stewart, we know it when we see it — but certainly, a few years into the 21st century, our understanding of time must be deeper than that. By now, you'd think, science must have figured out why time seems to flow, why it always goes in one direction and why we are uniformly drawn from one second to the next. The fact is, though, the explanations for these basic features of time remain controversial. And the more physicists have searched for definitive answers, the more our everyday conception of time appears illusory |
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