The following is a message sent to me by a friend in Peking University regar-
ding the sick female student. It is apparent that there is something not true.
Qiti Guo
Forwarded message:
> From he.y@bimp.pku.edu.cn Fri Apr 28 02:37:08 1995
> Date: Fri, 28 Apr 1995 15:34:28 +0800 (EAT)
> From: He Yi <he.y@bimp.pku.edu.cn>
> To: Qiti Guo <guo>
> Subject: Re:
> In-Reply-To: <9504261334.AA29303@rainbow.uchicago.edu>
> Message-Id: <Pine.HPP.3.91.950428144656.25678F-100000@svr.bimp.pku.edu.cn>
> Mime-Version: 1.0
> Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
>
> Dear Qiti,
>
> The help-needed message from Peking Univ. is not correct. I verified it
> with a good friend of mine in Dept. of Chem. here. He told me this was not
> true. But the thing seems to be authentic. Somebody saw it in the Chinese
> Youth Newspaper some days ago. But the girl in sickness is not a student
> of Peking Univ. There exists a kind of dido now in the net. Some day you
> might receive an email from a completely unknown person. The email would
> ask you to repeat itself to others as many as you can, with all kinds of
> reasons. The result is: too many emails fill out all the computer
> resources and reduce the speed or some other bad things will happen. It
> is a kind of cheating taking advantages of people's belief or warm-heart.
> After receiving such files I always will consider if it is true. Also
> worthy of mention is that the email address appended at the bottom of
> that email is not a useful one.
>
> Later! Take care! Yi
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