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Re: [atlarge-discuss] Re: failure notice



Woops, you're right. I assumed it was the encoding and did not read the entire error message...

--Sotiris

Abel Wisman wrote:

This one was rejected for size matters, not characters.

Abel


-----Original Message-----
From: Sotiris Sotiropoulos [mailto:sotiris@hermesnetwork.com] Sent: 27 May 2003 15:44
To: atlarge discuss list
Subject: [atlarge-discuss] Re: failure notice


For those who wish to turn this organization into the Tower of Babel, I just tried to send a message in Greek to this list, but the list software rejected the message. I want to communicate in Greek, but the list is not configured to accept Greek, so we have a problem. After all, how can you people want to participate in an international organization and not be able to speak and write in Greek?!?!?

--Sotiris Sotiropoulos

MAILER-DAEMON@lists.kettenhemdhuehner.de wrote:


Hi. This is the qmail-send program at lists.kettenhemdhuehner.de. I'm afraid I wasn't able to deliver your message to the following addresses. This is a permanent error; I've given up. Sorry it didn't work out.

<atlarge-discuss@lists.fitug.de>:
ezmlm-reject: fatal: Sorry, I don't accept messages larger than 30000 bytes (#5.2.3)

--- Below this line is a copy of the message.

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Date: Tue, 27 May 2003 10:35:40 -0400
From: Sotiris Sotiropoulos <sotiris@hermesnetwork.com>
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<mdrios@adinet.com.uy>,

atlarge discuss list <atlarge-discuss@lists.fitug.de>,
"J-F C. (Jefsey) Morfin"
<jefsey@club-internet.fr>
Subject: Re: [atlarge-discuss] =?ISO-8859-1?Q?m=E9thodes_de_travail_?=
=?ISO-8859-1?Q?normales?=
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????????????? ????????; ??? ??? ?????? ?? ?????? ???????, ?? ??????
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--
-----------

"The science of jurisprudence regards the state and power as the
ancients regarded fire- namely, as something existing absolutely.
But for history, the state and power are merely phenomena, just as for
modern physics fire is not an element but a phenomenon.

From this fundamental difference between the view held by history
and that held by jurisprudence, it follows that jurisprudence can tell
minutely how in its opinion power should be constituted and what
power- existing immutably outside time- is, but to history's questions
about the meaning of the mutations of power in time it can answer
nothing."
				     --Leo Tolstoy, "War and Peace"