home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Xref: sparky sci.econ:9883 soc.culture.usa:10148 soc.culture.japan:14338 soc.culture.british:19474 soc.culture.canada:10429
- Path: sparky!uunet!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!paladin.american.edu!gatech!ukma!cs.widener.edu!dsinc!ub!galileo.cc.rochester.edu!rochester!fulk
- From: fulk@cs.rochester.edu (Mark Fulk)
- Newsgroups: sci.econ,soc.culture.usa,soc.culture.japan,soc.culture.british,soc.culture.canada
- Subject: Re: US as No. 1 (3 data books)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.201645.13327@cs.rochester.edu>
- Date: 27 Jan 93 20:16:45 GMT
- References: <2937207291.3.p00168@psilink.com>
- Organization: University of Rochester
- Lines: 34
-
- In article <2937207291.3.p00168@psilink.com> "James F. Tims" <p00168@psilink.com> writes:
- >I would like to make a passing observation about Texas. My whole family
- >is from Texas. All my grandfathers/grandfathers/uncles/aunts, etc., are
- >from Texas and live there now. I have lived in Texas. Do not mistake
- >Texas with the United States. Legally, it is one of the states, but
- >when one is in Texas, one is in a whole 'nother country, as they say.
-
- I couldn't pass up the chance to make a couple more observations.
-
- Claude Scales, a dear friend in New York, was involved in the effort to
- get Texas into the Union, electrically.
-
- For many decades, the other 47 contiguous states have all belonged to the
- national electrical grid. Texas didn't; that way, it didn't have to
- submit to Federal regulation. However, the law was written that if any
- Texas utility were ever to buy or sell electricity via the grid, Texas
- would fall under regulation. A New Jersey utility bought a small Texas
- Panhandle electric company, and an Oklahoma company just over the border.
- It then ran a DC line (Texas, not being on the grid, was a bit off-frequency
- for an AC connection) to the Panhandle. They kept this line going for
- a few years, then announced it and sued successfully to have Texas join
- the grid.,
-
- Computer users in Texas rejoiced: at last their computers' line clocks kept
- time with the rest of the US!
-
- I have seen it claimed (but haven't verified) that Texas retains the legal
- right to secede from the US. Although many of us keep hoping, it hasn't
- happened yet :-).
-
- Mark
- --
- Mark A. Fulk University of Rochester
- Computer Science Department fulk@cs.rochester.edu
-