Because your post was a reply to me and it said...
'I asked this individual... The individual did not respond.'
You want references to textbook and articles that taught Nebraska Man? One textbook is "Fossil Men: A Textbook of Human Palaeontology" 1957. The truth be told, it was in *all* the textbooks at the time of the Scopes trial and the judge was even questioned as to whether or not it should be admitted as evidence. He declined because the trial was not supposed to be about whether evolution was true or not, but what a particular teacher has taught in a particular classroom.
Articles were published in Scientific American, The NY Times, and the French L'Anthropologie.
Simply denying that fraud was perpetrated by evolutionists does not make it go away. Nor that it has been perpetrated again and again in order to promote a *belief* that is as much as religion as any other.
You didn't ask me anything. Maybe I'm confused and you're referring to someone else. As for the "Missing Day in Space" sorry but I've never heard of it.
It's not just one isolated incident. There's Orce Man, the Piltdown Skull, and Java man to name just a few. Evolutionists have never had a problem with fraud so long as it gets them to the conclusion they want.
"Nebraska Man" was one of many dishonest attempts by evolutionists to "prove" evolution. They claimed that they had found fossils of the mising link in Nebraska. Text books were printed with pictures of what Nebraska man looked like. Articles were written detailing how Nebraska man lived - all based on the finding of a *single tooth* - which turned out to be a pigs tooth btw. This does nothing to inspire confidence in the argument for me.
Though I didn't own it myself the first computer I programmed on was Univac 9200 COS (that's right - CARD operating system) during high school. It used standard IBM 80 column punched cards and most of my programming at the time as in RPG-II.
And btw, those lights were most certainly NOT decorative. We actually used FPS (front panel switches) in conjunction with the lights to enter hex codes and memory locations to aid in debugging, as well as to start loading cards!
The first computer I actually owned was a Leading Edge XT clone that ran at a whopping 7 mhz.
Because your post was a reply to me and it said...
... The individual did not respond.'
'I asked this individual
You want references to textbook and articles that taught Nebraska Man? One textbook is "Fossil Men: A Textbook of Human Palaeontology" 1957. The truth be told, it was in *all* the textbooks at the time of the Scopes trial and the judge was even questioned as to whether or not it should be admitted as evidence. He declined because the trial was not supposed to be about whether evolution was true or not, but what a particular teacher has taught in a particular classroom.
Articles were published in Scientific American, The NY Times, and the French L'Anthropologie.
Simply denying that fraud was perpetrated by evolutionists does not make it go away. Nor that it has been perpetrated again and again in order to promote a *belief* that is as much as religion as any other.
You didn't ask me anything. Maybe I'm confused and you're referring to someone else. As for the "Missing Day in Space" sorry but I've never heard of it.
It's not just one isolated incident. There's Orce Man, the Piltdown Skull, and Java man to name just a few. Evolutionists have never had a problem with fraud so long as it gets them to the conclusion they want.
"Nebraska Man" was one of many dishonest attempts by evolutionists to "prove" evolution. They claimed that they had found fossils of the mising link in Nebraska. Text books were printed with pictures of what Nebraska man looked like. Articles were written detailing how Nebraska man lived - all based on the finding of a *single tooth* - which turned out to be a pigs tooth btw. This does nothing to inspire confidence in the argument for me.
Nebraska Man. Need I say more?
Yep. Just ask netgear. http://www.netgearsettlement.com/index.aspx
Though I didn't own it myself the first computer I programmed on was Univac 9200 COS (that's right - CARD operating system) during high school. It used standard IBM 80 column punched cards and most of my programming at the time as in RPG-II.
And btw, those lights were most certainly NOT decorative. We actually used FPS (front panel switches) in conjunction with the lights to enter hex codes and memory locations to aid in debugging, as well as to start loading cards!
The first computer I actually owned was a Leading Edge XT clone that ran at a whopping 7 mhz.
For those who still remember holerith code...
0-3 11-9 2 11-6 11-3 12-4