Yes - my 'farside' desk calendar said it was groundhog day in the US too. Is a groundhog the same as a gopher? What is the story behind groundhog day? Is it worth celebrating? If so, what does one do? (This is the sort of question that the civilization created museums to answer - BTW, the good folks at the Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology claim that the famous Minnesota gopher so renowned on the internet is not a gopher at all but a 13-lined ground squirrel and have a phylogenetic reconstruction to prove it - see, museums really do have a place in the cosmos...) now to business: Barbara Weitbrecht wrote: > Jim Croft says: > >Walter Henry ([log in to unmask]), moderator of the Consdist list > >maintains a wais archive of electronically available Disaster/emergency > >plans - links to this server can be picked up through our gopher and WWW > >servers (155.187.10.12, ports 70 and 80 respectively). There are about > >8 or so good plans available there. Walter's wais server at Stanford had changed its name (where is stable taxonomy when you need it?) and I was a bit slack about getting around to altering or resource files to reflect this so the links may not have worked when you tried. All fixed now... Links to the Stanford wais server can be found on our gopher under other gophers, COnservation OnLine, etc. - gopher://155.187.10.12/11/other-gophers/cool/. Choose the search CoOL files option and enter a word like 'disaster' or 'emergency'. Our web server also points to this directory. With wais and gopher links to wais you can not browse what is there - you have to know what you want and then ask for it. There is a gopher server somwhere in the US that also points to these wais files, but I can not remember where it is. > >I have extracted these and marked then up in html and made them > >available through our WWW server > >(URL = http://155.187.10.12/disaster/disaster.html) plus links to a > >couple of other disaster gophers. Also available is our fire emergency > >procedures and protection strategy. About a quarter of the way down our web home page is a link to the ANBG Fire manual and the disaster recovery plans extracted from CoOL. (http://155.187.10.12/disaster/disaster.html). Further down there is another link to Conservation Online (http://155.187.10.12/cool/cool.html). > Jim, could you provide a few more details about where these files > are in Gopher-space or the World-Wide Web? I have been wandering > around the ANBG Gopher server all morning, but I can't seem to > find them. Which menu(s) are they on? Are they on an FTP server > somewhere, or just on the Gopher? Sorry, I have not copied the actual files to gopher yet - I was hoping a heap more plans were going to be posted to the net following the poignant reminder of the vulnerability of museums in Los Angeles recently. No ftp, sorry - we started with gopher (easy) and then expanded to World wide web (fun) and somehow forgot about FTP (useful) - hopefully we will get around to it later. I am not sure whether Walter has an FTP server to deliver the files but I know he is working feverishly on a gopher and web archive of materials conservation and preservation information from the CoOl wais site. Sorry you got lost in our gopher - you are not the first to do so - it is due for a radical reconstruction when we can find some time... If you get stuck again, contact me directly and we will try an isolate the problem. cheers jim ___________________________________________________________________________ Jim Croft [Herbarium CBG] internet: [log in to unmask] Australian National Botanic Gardens voice: +61-6-2509 490 GPO Box 1777, Canberra, ACT 2601, AUSTRALIA fax: +61-6-2509 599 URL=http://155.187.10.12:80/people/croft.jim.html ______Biodiversity Directorate, Australian Nature Conservation Agency______