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`FOCUS - 11 of 77 DOCUMENTS
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`Copyright 1995 Chicago Tribune Company
`Chicago Tribune
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`March 26, 1995 Sunday, CHICAGOLAND FINAL EDITION
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`SECTION: TECHNOLOGY AND THE WORKPLACE; Pg. 1; ZONE: C
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`LENGTH: 2204 words
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`HEADLINE: THE INTERNET BUSINESS COME HOME;
`A MAILBOX IN CYBERSPACE BRINGS WORLD TO YOUR PC
`
`BYLINE: By James Coates, Tribune Computer Writer.
`
`BODY:
`Harry Anastopoulos, president of a newly hatched Chicago-based Internet consulting company called Telusys Inc.,
`has seen the future of the American workplace in the Information Age, and its name is URL.
`URL stands for Uniform Resource Locator, and Anastopoulos and other entrepreneurs expect it will bring the
`greatest change to the business scene and American home since the personal computer arrived in the early '80s.
`A URL is like an address in cyberspace: On the worldwide network of computer networks known as the Internet, it
`becomes a place where its owner can post or publish anything the owner might wish.
`Having a URL means your business is on the Internet-which also means that whatever you are selling instantly is
`within reach of millions of potential customers.
`Anybody with an Internet-capable computer can find you through your URL. It's as simple as clicking on an icon
`and typing in your name or your business name for a computerized keyword search.
`And once they find you, they can view any material you choose to file on the Internet, such as advertising, custom-
`er-support literature or even products.
`Thus, to growing thousands of businesspeople, whether they work in an office or have a home-based business,
`these initials from the world of the Internet are becoming as much an indicator of success as the initials BMW were a
`decade ago.
`Time-Warner Inc. has a URL where the entertainment/publishing company does things as diverse as tout the latest
`cover story in People magazine and print a few sample chapters of the blockbuster novel "The Celestine Prophecy," by
`James Redfield.
`General Electric Co. runs a URL where it discusses properties of high-technology plastics with customers.
`The Chamber of Commerce in Sedona, Ariz., runs a URL, and local bed-and-breakfast operators post their availa-
`bilities and addresses on it.
`Barry Blue and Thomas Demos are among the first Chicagoans to put their business on URLs. They founded Nets
`to You, which specializes in hooking up individuals and small businesses to the Internet. The company charges $65 to
`make house calls, during which a technician provides the necessary software, then configures clients' computers to use
`the World Wide Web and other Internet features.
`
`Facebook's Exhibit No. 1009
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`THE INTERNET BUSINESS COME HOME;A MAILBOX IN CYBERSPACE BRINGS WORLD TO YOUR PC
`Chicago Tribune March 26, 1995 Sunday, CHICAGOLAND FINAL EDITION
`
`Dozens of local enterprises are starting to use URLs, Blue noted. They are as varied as the International Society of
`Exposure Analysis, which publishes its newsletter via a Chicago-based URL, and movie editor Joe Scudiero, who has
`made small samples of several of his films available via his URL.
`On the national level, you can find URLs from Miller Brewing Co., Ameritech, Tribune Co., Microsoft Corp., Intel
`Corp., the University of Chicago, the Louvre, the U.S. Census Bureau, the CIA, Mayor Daley and. . . . An estimated
`20,000 other businesses, institutions and individuals are counted among URL pioneers.
`Many use URLs to publish their resumes, so prospective employers can look at their qualifications in a decidedly
`favorable multimedia light. Such URLs typically include everything a printed resume does, plus a photograph and sam-
`ples of the applicant's work that an employer can peruse or pass up at will.
`Conversely, some companies are posting job openings on their URLs. It's then just a matter of a few key strokes to
`drop a company a note, telling its headhunters where to find your URL.
`Knowing how to use the vast numbers of URLs now offered by businesses, government agencies and academic in-
`stitutions means much more than mere advertising. It means you can exploit the vast resources of the Internet to en-
`hance your business or job.
`Anastopolous, therefore, isn't just thinking of Fortune 1000 clients when he talks with an evangelist's zeal of the
`potential awaiting those in small and medium-size businesses who use URLs to connect to the Internet.
`"The playing field has been leveled, and everyone is in the game," said Anastopolous, who noted that the Internet
`has been swept up in a nationwide wave of popularity because access to it becomes ever easier, thanks to
`fast-developing technologies.
`Thus, as the Internet grows as a nationwide force, the URL becomes a dominant buzzword in the American work-
`place.
`Having one amounts to a giant step beyond having an electronic-mail, or e-mail, address-and remember that e-mail
`has become the most heavily used part of the Internet among Americans at work and at home.
`It takes the e-mail process one step beyond just exchanging information. And that's where the power begins.
`In addition to having your address on-line, it's now possible with only a few clicks of a mouse to reach out to other
`addresses and glean a wealth of information as diverse as sales leads and demographics.
`But in order to examine what a URL can do, it is necessary to examine what the Internet can do.
`The idea behind the Internet is that roughly 1 million computer networks throughout the world are linked by
`high-speed telecommunications lines, thus giving people on each of the participating networks access to the resulting
`"worldwide web."
`More than 20 million computer users are known to be on the Internet; most analysts predict that this number will
`only increase in the coming months and years.
`Each participating network contributes whatever unique stores of information it might own and, as the price of ad-
`mission, makes that data available to all.
`Over the last decade this inter-network has grown to include rather amazing resources.
`Colleges started posting theses prepared by their graduate students on thousands of topics. Much of the data that
`supported those theses had been gathered from other Internet sites.
`Other schools transformed the entire text of reference works, poetry and literature into computer files and posted
`them on the network. Newspapers and magazines were added, and publications prepared solely for on-line consump-
`tion, called "e-zines," came into being.
`Federal agencies as diverse as the Census Bureau, Patent Office, Library of Congress, Social Security Administra-
`tion and Labor Department began putting reams of statistics, reports, forms and other documents into Internet-connected
`computers.
`Millions of people all over the world created a system of informal computer bulletin boards called newsgroups and
`used them to exchange views and information on subjects as diverse as biophysics and boyfriends.
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`THE INTERNET BUSINESS COME HOME;A MAILBOX IN CYBERSPACE BRINGS WORLD TO YOUR PC
`Chicago Tribune March 26, 1995 Sunday, CHICAGOLAND FINAL EDITION
`
`People with access to one network were able to send e-mail to people with access to any of the other networks on
`the Internet. Soon e-mail became the favored means of exchanging business information in many industries. Plus,
`home-oriented telephone dial-up computer services like America Online, CompuServe and Prodigy made Internet
`e-mail available to their customers.
`Then, as computer sales began to boom in recent years, having access to Internet e-mail became an important busi-
`ness tool not just for top executives and the computer savvy, but for many ordinary workers.
`Growing numbers of experts speculate that having access to the Internet from a desktop computer soon will be as
`commonplace as having access to a telephone or to a U.S. Postal Service letter carrier.
`And much of this optimism stems from the existence of URLs.
`Just as the home-oriented dial-up services have moved e-mail from the realm of high-level Internet sites into the
`public domain, so URLs promise to bring the rest of the Net to the masses.
`The key is that URL technology transforms what have been enormously complex commands in the computer lan-
`guage used by AT&T's Unix operating system into the same sort of drag-and-drop on-screen techniques that computer
`users employ with Microsoft Corp.'s Windows or Apple Computer Inc.'s Macintosh.
`For nearly a decade, those Unix commands have served as the key to the information in the Internet when it was the
`sole domain of computer scientists and the more sophisticated hobbyists. These commands have names like File Trans-
`fer Protocol (FTP), Gopher, Veronica, Usenet, Finger, Archie and Internet Relay Chat.
`Using FTP, you type commands into one computer and are taken via high-speed telecommunications links to a
`second computer, where it's possible to read directories of the files that computer's owners have posted for Internet ac-
`cess. Typing more commands allows you to download any file into the original computer.
`Gopher does the same thing as FTP, but in a slightly different way. Veronica is a method of searching multiple
`computers for files containing keywords. The other Unix commands use other methods, but they all amount to reaching
`out from one computer to another to acquire or offer information.
`In 1993 computer scientists on the campus of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign developed graphical
`software for Windows- and Macintosh-type computers that let users manipulate on-screen icons to do many of the
`things that can be accomplished by using the Unix commands.
`Those computer scientists coined the expression "Internet browser" to describe such software programs and called
`their browser Mosaic.
`At first the browsers simply operated on computers at university and business worksites already connected to the
`Internet via the backbone of high-speed telecommunications lines.
`Each computer on the Internet was given a name by the InterNIC Directory and Database Service, which is sup-
`ported by AT&T and the National Science Foundation in a voluntary effort to maintain order on the Internet.
`The concept of URLs was developed by a consortium of physics departments in European universities called
`CERN. URLs are subsets of the addresses maintained by InterNIC and thus allow individual users of each computer
`network to reserve a small part of that network for their interests. These URLs thus designate what are called home
`pages. For example, http://www.uiuc.edu is the URL for the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
`One typed a URL into a browser, and the software would make the proper links to the Internet, then call up on the
`screen graphical representations of whatever the host computer was offering, including photographs, text files, even
`multimedia material such as music and movies.
`This amounted to doing the same things that were available via FTP, Gopher, Veronica, etc. But now the infor-
`mation surfaced with the same sort of ease as when using Windows- and Macinosh-style PCs.
`In most cases a user downloaded this material by clicking on underlined text representing the desired file. This
`technique of using text as a jumping-off point for the information behind it is called hypertext.
`The "http" in most URLs stands for hypertext transfer protocol as in the http://www.uiuc.edu address for the U. of
`I. The initials "www" stand for the World Wide Web, which is the name given to the Internet.
`
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`THE INTERNET BUSINESS COME HOME;A MAILBOX IN CYBERSPACE BRINGS WORLD TO YOUR PC
`Chicago Tribune March 26, 1995 Sunday, CHICAGOLAND FINAL EDITION
`
`The ".edu" stands for education, and shows it's a college site. A government site is designated ".gov", while ".com"
`identifies a commercial site.
`The computer scientists who put the whole Internet thing together developed the final key to today's picture when
`they found ways to use ordinary telephone lines to link PCs with the World Wide Web. This was a major change for the
`Web, which, for most of its existence, had been reachable only through major computer installations linked to
`high-speed telecommunications lines leased by colleges, governments and businesses.
`And a new acronym came on the scene: SLIP, for Serial Line Internet Protocol.
`To link a PC to the Internet, a SLIP connection employs the same modems that are used to hook up that PC to an
`America Online-type of service.
`Once that link is made, the most ordinary home PC enjoys the same Internet status as does a $500,000 workstation
`in a scientist's laboratory.
`Currently, most SLIP access is obtained by subscribing to a new class of businesses called Internet service provid-
`ers, which work somewhat like the better known CompuServe-type operations.
`Customers phone in using special SLIP software. Once this software connects the computer with the Internet, the
`user then runs a browser program and begins browsing.
`Karl Denninger owns MacroComputer Solutions Inc., one of Chicago's largest Internet service-provider companies.
`(Nets to You works in cooperation with Macro Computer Solutions.)
`Denninger noted recently that in less than a year, the number of his subscribers has grown from a few hundred to
`about 4,000. Most pay between $10 and $20 a month for access to the Internet, either using traditional Unix commands,
`or SLIP links and URLs.
`But supplying SLIP links may prove to be a short window of opportunity for such small entrepreneurial outfits.
`In recent weeks, Prodigy, a joint venture of Sears, Roebuck and Co. and International Business Machines Corp.,
`has been offering a Web browser to its 1.5 million subscribers.
`Steve Case, president of America Online, says that his service will have a browser up and running in April or May
`for its 2.1 million customers.
`And CompuServe, with 2 million customers in the U.S., also is expected soon to make a browser part of its service.
`As Anastopoulos said, he has seen the future and its name is URL.
`----------
`The e-mail address for Tribune computer writer James Coates is jcoates1@aol.com
`
`
`GRAPHIC: PHOTO GRAPHICPHOTO: Harry Anastopoulos of Telusys Inc., an Internet consulting firm, says that
`URLs help put everyone "in the game." Tribune photo by Walter Kale.; GRAPHIC (color): About the cover. The illus-
`tration and design are by John Bleck.
`
`LOAD-DATE: March 26, 1995
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`Facebook's Exhibit No. 1009
`Page 4
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`‘SUNDAY, MARCH25,
`
`1985
`
`By Teresa Puente
`‘Thanena STAFF WArrER
`A l0yearold South Side boy
`was in critical condition Satur-
`day after being set afire, allegedly
`by his mother’s boyfriend, who
`police said was upset because he
`believed the child had stolen
`about £20 worthoffood stamps.
`
`said Chicago Police Cmdr.
`‘Charles Smith. “He was trying to
`pet the truth out of the children.”
`Harris was arrested on
`of heinous battery and
`attempted heinous battery, both
`felonies with penalties of six to
`30 years in prison, Smith said.
`“If the child should pass, natu-
`rally we're going to seek murder
`charges,” Smith sald.
`Harris doused the boy and his
`Lbyear-old sister with rubbing
`alcohol and charcoal lighter
`Quid while trying to get
`to the
`bottom of the missing food
`
`stamps, police said.
`After questioning the children,
`who refused to confess, Harris
`piece of paper that be Ut from
`the stove, Smith sald. He first
`went after the young girl, who
`escaped injury. But
`the boy
`couldn't get away.
`‘The 10-year-old suffered sec-
`ond- and third-degree burns to
`
`extensive burns have “a very
`high mortality rate,” said Dr.
`Elizabeth Beahm, chief resident
`
`Only his face, part of his
`lower
`men and the front
`amed, Beahm said. He is on a
`pat of his thighs were not
`‘ventilator and has been unable
`to talk because of a breathing
`Ba
`ne down his throat, Beahm
`“The next 24 hours is one
`‘hurdle, but he has many ahead
`ofhim," Beahm said.
`
`Wyler Children’s Hospital at the
`University ofChicago.
`Typically, victims with such
`
`torture somebody like that over
`$20. [I's] nothing but a piece of
`Sex Bov, Pace 4
`
`Chicagoland
`Boyset afire over missing food stamps
`
`Newsfrom
`THE CITY OFCHICAGO:
`along with reportsfram
`around the region.
`
`The boy must undergo mul
`tiple skin grafts and other op-
`erations, and recovery could
`take years, Beahm said,
`“He's in for a long stay and a
`long recuperation.” Beahm said.
`“He is young and has a good
`heart. We presume he's Ibealthy.
`‘That's one of the best things he
`has going for him.”
`
`Ravages of AIDS
`just can’t destroy
`this family unit
`
`“My dad, he used to shoot up needles,”
`Angela said. “My mom got AIDS from him.
`He died March 23, 1980. | rememberbecause
`Thad just come home from school I put my
`wn and went to make his food, 1
`do all the cooking. I used to be a
`slave. Anyway,aller I had brought him the
`food,he started to have selzures. He was In
`a recliner and foam was coming out of his
`mouth.”
`She recalled her mother's death in the
`same detail, describing
`the way her
`mother’s thick hair
`and then fell
`out, how her skin and eyes turned yellow.
`“My mom, she loved going to the
`hospital," Angela said. “She said the food
`was delicious. And 1 guess she liked the
`privacy.”
`Grace Diaz dicd at home one day In 1982
`at the age of 37, leaving seven orphans in
`the care of Robert Haze,
`‘Haze had joined the family in 1989 as a
`
`
`
`buy,
`food to
`There’s no
`to pay, and thayJust couldn't
`make it anymore
`When I met
`several months ago,
`she was 16, oneofeight children born in 10
`time to lose
`years toa mother of Italian heritage and a
`father of Mexican descent.
`Both their parents had died of AIDS, and
`for Burris
`Angela and her six younger siblings were
`They walk line
`living in a Hispanic neighborhood on the
`‘North Side with an African-American ex-
`Short campaign adds
`between graffiti,
`to sense of urgency
`Joseph A. Kirby
`when it might have done some good.Itell it
`TRUK STAPF WRITER
`now simply a5 proofofone family’s ferce
`art, many say
`It
`is 10:16 am. and Roland
`By
`Van Matre
`ESee
`and
`Baniak
`‘Thenie STAFF WRITERS
`An eight-foot-high snake wearing a
`gokd chain coils ominousiy on the back
`‘wall of a garage near downtown Aurora.
`A few blocks away, o massive Grim
`Reaper painted on the side of a small
`market glowers over the image as
`peace scrawled i
`Is this outlaw gangbanger graffitl or
`an artistic expression of community
`pride?
`‘That's one of the questions being faced
`by Aurora officials as
`consider an
`ordinance that would limit
`the size of
`outdoor murals in residential
`neighborhoods, beading to a debate that
`touches on wider questions of culture,
`free speech and art.
`“It's a complex issue,” observed Jennie
`Kiessling, director of community-based
`programs for the School of the Art Insti-
`‘tute in Chicago.
`Murals—tneluding some that actually
`2B,
`incorporate graffiti—"can be really
`defeated Democratic primary
`fabulous aesthetically when the colors
`opponent Joseph Gardner, @
`are magnificent and they are well
`commissioner with the Metro
`re
`rooms overrun by roaches, rats and dirty
`thought out,” Kiessling
`children.
`kids are living
`politan Water Reclamation Dis-
`late to the community
`He threw outthe
`boiled the
`in”
`trict. And the clock will remain
`Burris’ enemy until the April 4
`clothes,
`toilets. He washed
`But in many people's minds,
`the
`the lice fromthechildren's Ibair,
`boundaries between cultural and artistic
`general election.
`Burris, who out of deference
`‘The kids, in his words, “were Kind of
`expression and gang-related graffiti can
`to Gardner did not actively cam-
`Tough.” One girl called him “nigger” to his
`be blurry, resulting in such measures as
`face.
`paign or raise funds before Feb.
`the Aurora proposal,
`28,
`is running the political
`But he stayed on the Job, and after
`Supporters of the ordinance, which
`‘Grace's husband died, he moved in. Two
`would Limit murals in residential areas
`equivalent of a Shyard dash. It
`would be difficult for any politl-
`years later, close to death, Grace asked him
`to six square feet and restrict murals om
`to marry her. By all accounts, they had not
`cian, but especially for Burris,
`commercial buildings to one-tenth of the
`whose deliberate, conservative
`been lovers, but he had become a member
`wall, say it would help curb what can be
`ofthe family, and all of them shared one
`style da reflected by his
`perceived as gang imagery.
`trademark dark three-piece
`desire: to avoid having the children
`suits,
`“Areas that have murals tend to have
`parceled ont to relatives and foster homes.
`more gang problems,” said Ald. Kennoth
`When Grace Diaz died, Haze began
`“We're doing something that I
`don't
`think has been done on
`Hinterlong, the proposal's main backer.
`proceedings to adopt the children A new
`this level before: minning a 3i-
`“That may not be a cause-and-effect rela-
`problem arose.
`‘tionship, but there is a correlation.”
`Because of her illness, Grace Diaz had
`day campaign agninst the mayor
`Bat some artists point out that there
`of the City of Chicago,” sald
`‘been eligible for various kinds of public
`Burris, 57, Mlinois’ former attor-
`‘usually are significant differences in the
`and private assistance. When she died, that
`money dried up.
`intent of murals and graffiti, gang-relat-
`ney general and comptroller.
`ed or otherwise.
`
`“If it were anyone other than
`Hage worked offand on, butit was hard
`“To me, the difference between murals
`Roland Burris,” he said,
`“I
`with seven Kids, one of them a é-year-old
`with AIDS. The children referred to him as
`and graifiti seems relatively clear,” said
`would say It would be an impos-
`sible task.”
`their father, but in the eyes ofthe state, he
`Jon Pounds, director of Chicago Public
`At thmes, it appears as if Bur-
`was just another unemployed single male,
`Art Group, a nonprofit organization that
`eligible for only a meager amountof public
`has been involved in Chicago murals
`tis revels in the challenge, In
`ald, Nevertheless, for a while, the family got
`fect, at several campaign stops,
`since lis inception in 1970. “Graffiti
`is
`Burris often has reminded audi-
`yY seen as an outlaw act, some-
`ences how many days remained
`Several weeks aller my first visit, | spent
`thing. done covertly. A mural is done
`another afternoon at the Diazes’ ground-
`openly and tries to engage the commun|-
`until
`the election.
`It will be 10
`on Sunday.
`ty.”
`floor apartent—their seventh home in.
`seven years,
`Despite the obvious difference:
`But Pounds agreed that for most peo-
`es between Burris and Gardner,
`‘The kids rushed in from school, hugged
`ple,
`the line between the two is much
`Haze and sat down promptly to do their
`much of Burris’ campaign |s al-
`fuzzier. And, almost invariably, fuzzy
`homework. One of Robert's Rules of Order;
`most a mirror image of Gard-
`boundaries spawn negative assumptions.
`No TV or radio until homework was done
`ner's, Perhaps that is by design,
`get confused because they be-
`and rooms were cleaned.
`since Burris has sald repeatedly
`Heve that murals either mark an eco-
`that Gardner has “passed him
`Haze was a congenial, quiet, well-spoken
`nomic downtum in a neighborhood or
`the baton.”
`man in his Sts, both patient and stern with
`encourage graft.” Pounds sal
`the children. Asked why he would take on.
`Burris, for example, advocates
`‘Once considered the “poor stepchild”
`reducing the city's head tax on
`the task of raising someone else's children,
`of the art world, murals increasingly
`businesses, as did Gardner. He
`he said simply that they provided him with
`also supports another Gardner
`‘lve family he had never had,
`“Sometimes I think he's some kind of
`platform plank: improving af-
`fordable housing. Similarly, Bur-
`angel,” Angela said. “Sometimes 1 think he's
`sent by God."
`ris says improving public
`Ls will decrease crime and
`‘The apartment was shabby but neat and
`filled with Haze's second-hand hooks,
`increase economic development.
`And Burris,
`like Gardner, has
`‘incinding encyclopedia sats, the complete
`works of Mark Twain and several Bibles,
`unsuccessfully chalionged Daley
`to debate.
`Angela showed off her two favorites. One,
`One difference has been Bur:
`a gift (rom her mother, was “Family Circle
`Weekend Crafts.” The other was called
`ris’ campaign style. Unlike the
`“Viruses.”
`low-key Gardner, who focused
`on issues, Burris has adopted 2
`Angela said thal, unlike her parents,
`new spitfine persona,
`Robert emphasized college.
`"Robert tells us education is everything.
`Healleged that Daley has lied
`He will tolerate no dummies in our house."
`about the number of city police
`officers. He accused Daley of *
`In the past couple ofyears, she said, her
`grades had gone from Ds and Fs to Bs and
`putting 2 colleague up to of
`co
`fering Burris two high-paying
`By now, the family was desperate. For
`government jobs to stay oul of
`the race. And he makes provoca-
`tmysterlous bureaucratic reasons, their food
`tive remarks,
`‘stamps had been repeatedly cul. Now they
`recerved $360 a monthly in stamps for the
`"Rich|e Daley cannot speak,”
`Sea Bonms, Pack3
`‘See Scum, Pace4
`
`
`
`mayor of Chicago is taping a
`radio show, and the program's
`host has Qubbed his introduc-
`tion.
`“Tm sorry,” be tells Burris. “I
`know you're in a hurry.”
`Burris offers no smile, no
`words,
`No wonder, At 11 am, Burris
`must be at another radio studio
`to record another show, ‘Then he
`will be whisked to an 11M5 a.m.
`Loop fundraiser. And at 1215
`
`
`Campaign '95
`pam., be is scheduled to tour the
`Chicago Board Options Ex-
`change.
`i
`Hack in the studio, Burris still
`ts walling. Staff members pace
`outside the sound booth. The
`
`
`
`
`
`have come into their own in recent
`years,
`in part, Pounds noted, “because
`the art world has decided that [an art
`work's] relationship to community is
`important.”
`
`phonosby Ed Wagner
`tune
`Hector Barlilas, 17, proudly shows off
`the mural he helped paint (above) in
`Aurora. Another mural graces an alley
`Barage near New York Street (left).
`
`While murals were prominent in Mex-
`ican art
`in the 1920s and 1930s and
`Played an important role in America's
`Depression-era WPA art projects,
`the
`current mural movement was fueled by
`Pes and social concerns in the
`Today, public murals are likely to
`trumpet themes of community empower-
`ment, In Chicago's largely Latino Pilsen
`neighborhood, for example, murals often
`reflect a sense of cultural pride and fre-
`‘See Munasa, Pace 4
`
`Hofer acquittal grew from unusual tactics
`Boing gets tough:
`By Jon Mitkeviteh
`‘Tamia: Stare Warrke
`“It never hurts to suggest that
`Attorney worked to raise doubts
`@ bad guy or a bunch of bad
`Helmut Carsten Hofer, who ac-
`guys lurk somewhere in tho
`cording to Interpol police re-
`shadows," observed David
`if he ever makes it
`to law
`Suzanne Olds, Kling, who repre
`cords “came to notice" of Mun-
`Protess, a journalism professor
`sented the 26-year-old German,
`school, one of the first princi-
`ich police in the mid-1980s for
`at Northwestern University who
`ples he is kely to encounter in
`was holding court outside court
`in Skokie.
`in prostitution, says he
`Spee:
`| affairs.
`an ethics clacs may come from
`wants to study to become a
`The jury is still out on
`the lips of his current mentor
`“I have a strong sense that if
`criminal trial lawyer as a result
`whether that strategy will work
`you aré dishonest with a jury, it
`and hero, professor Richard
`of fils latest brush with the law:
`all the time, or, say, in the mega-
`Killing, who teaches at the Chica-
`will come back to haunt your
`‘his experience as a murder de-
`trial of O.J. Simpson. But in
`g0-Kent College ofLaw.
`client," Kling said.
`fendant.
`Hofer’s case,
`the bad-guy-in-the-
`While that generally is tre,
`Shortly before Hofer, 26, was
`the high
`court of reality dictates
`shadows theory arguably saved
`Hofer, of course, will have ¢
`acquitted in a jury trial Friday
`@ fallback doctrine when the
`complete high school first. Ai
`z
`See Hoven, Pack 8
`of murdering Wilmette resident
`
`Facebook's Exhibit No. 1009
`Page 5
`
`Facebook's Exhibit No. 1009
`Page 5
`
`

`

`4 SECTION 19 @SUNDAY, MARCH 26,1995 »
`ano
`
`- Technology and theWorkplace
`
`CELCEL
`
`& WOR;
`
`‘Amailboxincyberspacebringsworld to yourPC
`
`Chicagoans to put their business on URLs, They
`founded Nets to You, which specializes in hooking up _
`businesses
`Individuals and small
`to the Internet. The
`wichccacharges $65 to cee calls, during
` to use athen configures clients’ t i‘ computersitera
`
`
`
`
`‘Wide Web and other Internet features.
`Blue noted. They are as varied as
`International
`Dazens of local enterprises are ane to use re
`Society of ExposureSeytmanicn,apt its
`newsletter via a Chicago-based IRL, and movie editor
`Joe Scudiero, who has made small samples of several
`of his films available via his URL.
`nal
`ean find URLs from Miller
`Brewing Co., ‘Ameritech,Tr"Tribune Co., Microsoft Corp,
`Intel Carp, the University of Chicago, the Louvre, the
`U.S. Census Bureau, the CLA, Mayor Daley and. ... An
`estimated 20,000 other businesses, institutions and in-
`dividuals are counted among URL pioneers.
`Many use URLs to publish thelr resumes, so pros-
`(CONTINUEDOf PAGE 9
`
`—_—_—_—_gina——
`Fingertip multimedia
`Itsy-bitsy computers
`The game is marketing,
`the medium is
`They're called subnotebooks, but they
`CD-ROM, the tool is your PC. Page 2.
`‘speak volumes for producthity. Page 4,
`
`Dashit off digitally
`Ina bury to communicate? ISDN may be
`the information road rocket. Page 6.
`
`
`
`a
`
`Facebook's Exhibit No. 1009
`Page 6
`
`SPECTAL? SEC
`
`
`
`x 4
`
`:
`By James Coates
`‘TmoCommpurrin Wnrrie,
`Harry Anastopoulos, president of a newly hatched
`‘Chicago-based Internet consulling company calbed
`Telusys Inc.. has seen the future of the American
`proteplaca Inthe’ Tnfirmnaton Ags, ond ltrroaane is
`URL stands for Uniform Resource Locator, and
`Anastopoulos and other entrepreneurs expect it will
`‘bring the greatest change to the business scene and
`American home since the personal computer arrived
`in the early "30s.
`A URL (5 like an address in cyberspace: On the
`worldwide network of computer networks known as
`the Internet, it becomes a place where its owner can
`post or publish anything the owner might wish.
`Having a URL means your business is on the Inter-
`net—which also moans that whatever you are selling
`instantly is within reach of millions of potential cus-
`tomers.
`Anybody with an Internet-capable computer can find
`
`you through your URL. It's aa simple as elfcking on an
`icon and typing im your name or your business name
`for 8 computerized keyword search.
`And once
`find you, they can view any material
`you choose to
`file on the Internet, such 2s advertising,
`customer-support literature or even products,
`‘Thus, to growing thousands of businesspeople,
`whether they work in an
`or have a home-based
`business. these initials from the world of the Internet
`initials BMW were a decade ago.
`Bis scons tg Ah dedicat ot eiocess As The
`Time-Warner Inc. has a URL where the entertain-
`ment/publishing company does
`as diverse as
`tout the latest cover story in
`magazine and
`print 2 few sample chapters of the blockbuster novel
`“The Celestine Prophecy,” by James Redfield.
`‘General Electric Co. runs a URL where it discusses
`properties ofhigh-technology plastics with customers.
`‘The Chamber of Commerce in Sedona, Ariz, runs 0
`availabilities and addresses on it.
`URL, and Jocal peda-breakfast operators post thelr
`Barry Blie and Thomas Demos are among the first
`
`
`
`Facebook's Exhibit No. 1009
`Page 6
`
`

`

` WhyPC is
`
`
`out before
`it’s even in
`CownxvenFrom Page $
`the implications—Hewlett-Packard
`Cos printer division, for exam-
`ple—dominated the market.
`‘The
`first H-P laser printers sold for al-
`most $4000, but each new genera-
`tion cost
`less—and was smaller,
`weighed Jess and offered more.
`That's a case, Biggs said, where a
`company used its new-product
`strategy as a competitive weapon,
`“To make each successive gener-
`ation cheaper and cheaper, you're
`going to put a lot of pressure on
`profit margins,” he said. “A com-
`puter company has to take every
`advantage available to it”
`So what does this mean to us,
`the hapless consumers on the end
`of the whip?
`More than
`else, it re-
`quires us to be well informed
`about what we need a PC to do
`and less concerned with whether
`it
`ts going to be obsolete in six
`months.
`About two years ago, 1 donated
`one of my two old “lugable" 24-
`pound portable computers to a
`shoestring operation that works
`with the poor. By my slandards,
`the computer was a doorstop; by
`theirs, it wes a miracle.
`The group tells me that
`It's
`working just fine, thank you. I re-
`cently saw one just like it
`in a
`trash bin behind my building.
`
`As Anastopoulos sald, he has
`a the future and its name is
`‘The e-mail addressfor Tribune
`computer writer James Coazes is
`jeoates!@aoLeom
`
`Harry Anastopoulos of Telusys Inc., an Intemet consulting firm, says:
`
`
`
`ChicagoTribune, Sunday, March 26,1995
`
`19

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