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AT A time when the Hutton enquiry into the death of British government scientist David Kelly is very much in the public eye, Feedback was intrigued to be reminded that Kelly co-wrote a letter about anthrax that was published in New 杏吧原创 back in 1986.

What鈥檚 more, reader Adrian Smith informs us that the letter is now on an Institute for Scientific Information database, so it鈥檚 officially part of the great web of citations that is science. Unfortunately, because of a confusion over the last words of the published letter, which, like the names of the authors, are in italics, the ISI lists the lead author as 鈥淎nthracis, B鈥, whose address is given as 鈥淐hem Def Estab, Salisbury SP4 0JQ, Wilts, England鈥.

It seems this is something that the relevant security authorities should be informed about. If the bacillus was authoring letters about itself back then, what has it learned to do by now?

ARE you too being deluged with a new kind of spam email that buries a sales pitch in a welter of gibberish text?

A typical one we just received promises a 鈥淏achelor, Master or PhD鈥 in 30 days for the price of a few dinners out, and signs off with some paragraphs unashamedly labelled 鈥渞andom data鈥.

The gibberish that follows defeats junk mail filters, which work by looking for a high percentage of telltale words like 鈥渇ree鈥, 鈥渕ake money鈥 or 鈥淰iagra鈥.

It is hard not to have a sneaking admiration for the spammers who keep one step ahead of the filter designers. It鈥檚 just a pity they couldn鈥檛 do something more useful with their talent.

Be warned, though. On no account be tempted to 鈥渃lick here鈥 and reply with congratulations, sarcasm or abuse. The spammers often send bulk emails to guessed addresses. The one thing they want more than anything in the world is a reply which proves that a guessed address is 鈥渁ctive鈥 and owned by a real human.

MEANWHILE, here is the first verse of a poem that reader Bob Johnson has compiled from the subject lines of spam emails he has received. We like the way it seems to hover on the brink of meaning something without ever actually doing so.

changeable ducat semblance aries peregrine fairy curtain dogging seize homologous ceylon arty argot shadbush biscuit crow median arturo farsighted knoll agleam duluth eyebrow haines reducible bobbin epsom implementer morphism butch atlas everyday elder licentious paean Mad Cow Test & Prevention apologetic

Your degree is close

AND here is another new unit of measurement. The website has this to say when explaining the capacity of ADSL lines: 鈥1GB represents 200 MP3 songs (average 5MB per song) or 100 two-to-three minute MPEG videos.鈥

So the preferred new unit of measure for computer storage is the MP3Song 鈥 but given its relatively small size, reader Ross Bradley points out that perhaps the K-MP3Song or M-MP3Song would be a better unit.

THE Southern Daily Echo, a newspaper in the English port town of Southampton, has been waging a campaign against the local authority鈥檚 plans to collect rubbish less often.

This, the paper notes, 鈥渃ould spark an explosion of flies across the city鈥. And that, it goes on, is not a good thing: 鈥淢any of man鈥檚 primary diseases are transmitted by flies. These include typhoid, cholera, gangrene, tuberculosis, gonorrhoea, bubonic plague, leprosy, diphtheria, scarlet fever and amoebic dysentery.鈥

The entomologists, pathologists and bacteriologists among you may pick nits (so to speak) with some of that list. But gonorrhoea? As reader Mike Page notes, a lot of people are going to welcome that excuse. It鈥檒l certainly make a change from claims to have caught it off a towel.

ANOTHER research paper title that leaves you wondering 鈥 and, as reader Eddie Price says, surely a contender for an IgNobel prize: 鈥淐hocolate eating in healthy men during experimentally induced sadness and joy鈥 (Appetite, vol 39, p 147). We can鈥檛 help wondering: how did they do that, then?

THERE are daft product warnings, and there are those which we suspect were the result of managers failing an irony test set by underlings. For example, reader Chris Belcher insists that the bottom of a box of 鈥淐elebrations鈥 mini-chocolates bears the dire warning: 鈥淒o not read this whilst box is open鈥.

FINALLY, reader Roman Sznober was intrigued earlier this month to see an advertisement in his local newspaper, the Shropshire Star, for a 鈥淧ast Prevention Technician鈥. He is thinking of applying for the job, as he says there are several incidents in his past that he would like to prevent.

And, no, we don鈥檛 know what it means.

From the department of confident advertising. Reader Dave Smith tells us that a discount bedding store in Adelaide is proclaiming: 鈥淥ur January sale only happens once a year鈥

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